What people misunderstand about Alex de Minaur, according to Tennis Legend

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Tennis icon Andy Roddick, the 2003 US Open champion and former World No. 1, has long been a vocal supporter of Alex de Minaur’s grinding style. But after the Australian’s unbeaten heroics at the 2025 Laver Cup—where he spearheaded Team World’s 15-9 victory with a 6-1, 6-4 upset over Alexander Zverev and a gritty doubles win alongside Alex Michelsen—Roddick called out a persistent misconception about the 26-year-old’s game.

The Misunderstanding: “He’s Just a Counterpuncher”

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Roddick, speaking on his *Served with Andy Roddick* podcast post-Laver Cup, blasted the “lazy” label that paints de Minaur as merely a defensive counterpuncher. “People say he’s just a counterpuncher, like that’s some knock on him,” Roddick said. “That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. Alex is a creator—he dictates points, he’s aggressive off both wings, and his speed turns defense into offense faster than anyone.” Roddick emphasized de Minaur’s evolution: From early-career reliance on court coverage to his 2025 breakout, where he’s racked up 29 hard-court wins (ATP-leading) and titles in Washington and Acapulco, blending flat groundstrokes with net approaches.

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The former American star, who admires de Minaur’s work ethic (trained under Lleyton Hewitt’s guidance), argued the tag ignores his offensive firepower: “Watch him against Zverev—those forehand lasers? That’s not countering; that’s imposing your will.” Roddick’s take aligns with de Minaur’s own frustrations, shared after a 2025 Canadian Open win over Frances Tiafoe: “Critics say I’m just speedy defense… It fires me up to prove ’em wrong.”

Why It Persists—and Why It’s Wrong

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The “counterpuncher” narrative stems from de Minaur’s elite speed (fastest on tour, per Novak Djokovic) and ability to retrieve impossible balls, evoking David Ferrer more than a Federer-style attacker. His pre-2025 Slam quarters (US Open 2020, French/Wimbledon/Aus Open 2024) often ended in five-set epics against big hitters like Djokovic or Alcaraz, reinforcing the view. But 2025 stats debunk it: 68% first-serve points won, 42% break points converted, and 28 winners per match—top-10 marks for aggression.

Roddick, who faced similar “serve-only” jabs in his prime, sees de Minaur as a modern hybrid: “He’s got Federer’s touch at net, Nadal’s fire, and my serve-volley dreams. People undervalue that because he makes it look effortless.” The Laver Cup, where de Minaur earned seven points (including a bloodied-ear doubles stand), silenced doubters, pushing his ranking to a career-high No. 6.

Roddick’s Bigger Picture: De Minaur’s Ceiling

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Roddick predicts de Minaur, now dating British star Katie Boulter, could crack the top 3 by 2026: “If he adds a bigger serve, Slams are his. He’s not punching—he’s leading the counter.” With the Asian swing underway (Beijing next), de Minaur embodies Roddick’s ethos: Relentless, underrated, ready to roar.

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