Alex de Minaur Speaks Out on the Alexander Zverev Crisis: “Maybe It’s Time People Know the Truth…”

Melbourne, 13 January 2026 – The preparation for the 2026 Australian Open has taken an unexpected and disturbing turn. During a seemingly routine training session on court 3 at Melbourne Park, Alexander Zverev – world number 3 and finalist of the 2025 edition – completely lost control.
The German, fresh from a clear defeat against Hubert Hurkacz at the United Cup (6-3, 6-4), began to make routine mistakes: backhand slices into the net, long forehands, unforced errors that don’t belong to him. With each miss, the frustration visibly grew.
The climax came after a backhand cut into the net: Zverev threw the racket violently towards the stands, sending it flying past the electronic advertising boards.
The gesture left those present astonished – ball boys, coaches, a few lucky fans and, above all, his training partner: Alex de Minaur.
The moment was immortalized by a viral video posted on Reddit and taken up by dozens of tennis accounts (including @kevinzhao860 on
Miraculously, no one was hurt, but the gesture transformed a private session into a public episode that went around the world in just a few hours.
Zverev, known for his heated temper (remember the racket throw in the AO 2025 final and various similar episodes), seemed to be in the grip of something deeper than just a bad day.
Interviewed immediately afterwards by a Tennis Australia journalist outside the court, Alex de Minaur – the Australian number 1 in the country, Zverev’s long-time friend and often his sparring partner – did not downplay the incident.
Instead of dismissing it as “pre-tournament frustration” or “Grand Slam pressure,” he took a long pause, looked down and said words that weigh like rocks: **“Maybe it’s time people knew the truth…”**.
Those ten words triggered a media earthquake.
De Minaur added no details – he just shook his head and walked away – but the implication was clear: behind Zverev’s outburst there is something bigger, something that fans and the media have not yet seen in full.
Immediate speculation: personal problems? Pressure built up after the final lost to Jannik Sinner in 2025? Consequences of lifelong managing type 1 diabetes? Or perhaps references to old accusations of domestic violence (Zverev has always denied it and has reached out-of-court settlements with an ex-partner, but the topic comes up cyclically, especially in Australia)?
De Minaur, usually reserved and diplomatic, chose not to comment further when contacted by our newspaper. Sources close to the Australian team explain that “Alex saw things that worried him. He didn’t want to name names or accusations, but he felt he had to say something.
He is a friend, but also a colleague who knows how fragile mental balance is in high-level tennis.”
Zverev, for his part, released a short statement through his agent a few hours later: “It was a difficult session. It happens. I’m focusing on the tournament now. Thanks for the support.” No mention of racket toss, no apology to the crowd or ball kids.
Silence, in this case, speaks louder than words.
The context makes the episode even more worrying. Zverev arrives at the 2026 Australian Open as an outgoing finalist, but with a fluctuating 2025: final in Melbourne, but clear defeat by Sinner; title in Munich, finals in Stuttgart and Vienna, but no victory against the top players in the decisive moments.
The defeat at the United Cup against Hurkacz – complete with a destroyed racket – had already raised alarm bells. Now, this meltdown in practice, in front of de Minaur, raises questions about his mental preparation.
Experts such as Andy Roddick, interviewed on the Served podcast, commented: “Sascha is a phenomenon. His backhand is devastating, his serve is enormous. But if he doesn’t manage his head, he will never beat Alcaraz or Sinner twice in a row in a Slam. That throw in practice? It’s not just anger.
It’s a sign.” Roddick also praised de Minaur for speaking up: “Alex is one of the most balanced on the circuit. If he says ‘it’s time to know the truth’, it means that something has been cooking for some time.”
The tennis community is divided. On Reddit (/r/tennis), the thread “Zverev’s frustration in training today at AO” has collected hundreds of comments: some defend Zverev (“All pros break rackets in practice, Ruud admitted it”), others harshly criticize him (“It’s a pattern: United Cup, AO final 2025, now practice.

When does he stop?”) Many point to his constant retreat behind the baseline during training with de Minaur – a habit that ignores coaches’ advice and leaves him vulnerable under pressure.
Meanwhile, the Australian Open is preparing for the draw on Thursday 15 January. Zverev is seeded number 3, in a potentially lethal section with possible matches against Alcaraz, Medvedev or Rune.
De Minaur, for his part, is the local hero: number 8-10 in the world (depending on points), with the pressure of representing Australia on home soil. His cryptic comment added a layer of drama: two friends, two top players, but one who seems on the verge of falling apart.
What did de Minaur really mean by “the truth”? It could be referring to Zverev’s internal struggles – diabetes forcing him to constantly monitor glucose, stress and nutrition; the past accusations that continue to haunt him; or perhaps a burnout accumulated after years of being a top-5 player without a Slam.
Or it’s just a worried friendship: de Minaur saw a colleague in difficulty and wanted to send an indirect message.
Whatever the truth, the episode transformed the eve of the 2026 Australian Open into something more than just a tournament. It has become a debate about mental wellbeing in sport, about the fine line between passion and self-destruction, and about the courage to say “enough” when necessary.
Zverev has the talent to win his first Slam – he proved it by reaching the final here, in Paris and in New York. But if he doesn’t resolve what’s plaguing him, Melbourne Park could become another chapter of regret.
De Minaur, with those few words, opened a door. Now it’s up to Zverev to decide whether to close it or face it. The tennis world watches, holds its breath, and waits for the next point.