Alex De Minaur left Wimbledon on Monday after another painful fourth-round exit, losing to ninth-seeded Flavio Cobolli 7-5, 7-6, 6-3 in a match he led in both the second and third sets, extending a pattern of missed Grand Slam opportunities that has the Australian fifth seed beginning to question whether his breakthrough will ever arrive.
De Minaur held a 5-2 lead in the second set and held breaks of serve twice in the third before the Italian found a way through each time, closing out the match on No. 1 Court with a serve that De Minaur could barely return. The loss was the latest in a sequence of major tournament exits that has left the Australian with seven Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances but no deeper run, his only All England Club quarterfinal berth in 2024 having been ended by a hip injury before the match was played.
The emotional weight of another near-miss
De Minaur did not attempt to minimize what the loss meant or how it affected him. He described the feeling in direct and vulnerable terms, acknowledging that repeated failures to advance at moments that felt like genuine opportunities were beginning to affect his confidence and his sense of what he is capable of achieving.
He spoke about the goals and dreams that have motivated him throughout his career, and said they had started to feel more distant than they once did. He acknowledged the doubt that begins to accumulate when a player consistently falls short at the stage where breaking through would confirm the next level. The setting of this particular exit, with the draw appearing more open than usual given the absence of a two-time champion and the vulnerability of others in his half, added to the sting of the result.
The loss dropped De Minaur to a winless record in major matches when he fails to win the opening two sets, reflecting how dependent his results at this level have been on his ability to seize momentum early rather than recover from adversity later.
What the tournament context made even harder
The draw that confronted De Minaur this fortnight appeared to offer him a genuine path to deep progress. The defending champion and another heavy favorite were positioned in the other half of the men’s draw. The absence of a two-time champion due to injury removed another obstacle. An expanded sense of opportunity made what he described as falling short even more difficult to process.
He was seeking a milestone that would have placed him in rare company among Australian men’s players in the open era, a target that underscored how close he is to the historical markers of sustained Grand Slam success without yet having converted the trajectory into the deep runs that make permanent the reputation he is building.
Cobolli, the French Open runner-up making his own case for a quarterfinal run, described the victory as providing answers both about his own readiness and about the signal it sends to others remaining in the draw.
Finding perspective through what comes next
After the match, De Minaur indicated that he would try to move forward by redirecting his focus toward positive developments in his personal life, specifically his upcoming wedding to British tennis player Katie Boulter. He described those events as something he was genuinely excited about and framed the shift in attention as his best mechanism for processing the professional disappointment and putting it behind him.
The combination of raw professional pain and the grounded perspective of a life that continues beyond any single tennis result gave De Minaur’s post-match comments an unusual honesty that reflected both how much this loss hurt and how he intends to carry himself through it.

