In the immediate aftermath of one of the most painful and controversial first-round losses in recent Australian Open history, Alex de Minaur did something very few people expected.
Instead of staying silent or joining the wave of criticism, the world No. 8 and Australia’s highest-ranked male player chose to stand up — publicly, clearly, and emotionally — for his much younger compatriot Tristan Schoolkate.
Schoolkate, the 24-year-old wildcard from Perth, had just suffered a brutal collapse in his Australian Open debut. After taking a commanding two-set lead against France’s Corentin Moutet, he failed to capitalize on the Frenchman’s visible leg injury and eventually lost in four sets. The defeat was bad enough. What followed was far worse.

Australian social media, radio talkback, and even some sections of mainstream press unleashed an astonishing level of vitriol toward the young player. Phrases such as “choker”, “spineless”, “wasted opportunity”, “not ready for big time”, and far harsher personal attacks flooded every platform.
Then Alex de Minaur spoke.
In a statement released through his social media channels and quickly picked up by every major Australian sports outlet, de Minaur delivered words that stopped the country in its tracks.
“Even though he failed, he still gave everything he had on the court for his country, without ever thinking of giving up, only to face a wave of criticism for losing in the opening match. Be proud that so many young Australian players can compete in big tournaments like this.”
It was already an exceptionally strong, protective, and mature message from the country’s leading player. But he wasn’t finished.
Right after that powerful paragraph, de Minaur added one short, eight-word sentence that hit Australia like a thunderclap:
“If you can’t support them — then don’t call yourself Australian.”
The eight words landed with devastating force.

Within minutes the statement was trending number one nationally. The reaction was almost unanimous — stunned silence followed quickly by an enormous wave of support for both de Minaur and, significantly, for Tristan Schoolkate.
Suddenly the conversation changed completely.
Tens of thousands of people who had been typing abuse just hours earlier began posting messages of apology, support, and national pride. Many admitted they had been too quick to judge. Others said de Minaur’s words made them feel ashamed of their initial reaction.
High-profile Australians quickly lined up behind the world No. 8.Lleyton Hewitt posted simply: “Spoken like a true leader.” Former world No. 1 Ash Barty wrote: “Thank you Alex. This is what leadership looks like.”
Even Todd Woodbridge — who had been at the center of the original controversy after his own very harsh on-air criticism of Schoolkate — issued a public response:“I stand corrected. Alex is 100% right. We should be proud of the next generation, not tearing them down when they fall.”
Tristan Schoolkate himself appeared deeply moved. In his first public comments after the loss, he said:“I was pretty hurt and embarrassed… then I read Alex’s words.
I don’t have the words to explain what it means to me. Thank you, Alex. It means everything.”The impact went far beyond one player and one match.De Minaur’s intervention has started a much larger national conversation about:

• How Australia treats its young athletes • The enormous pressure placed on players competing on home soil • The often toxic nature of online sports discourse • The responsibility that established stars have to protect and nurture the next generation
Many commentators are already calling it one of the most important sporting leadership moments in recent Australian history.
At just 26 years of age, Alex de Minaur has quietly become much more than Australia’s best-ranked singles player.He has become a voice. A shield. A standard.When the moment came to either stay silent or speak — he spoke.And when he spoke, he chose eight words that many believe will be remembered for a very long time:
“If you can’t support them — then don’t call yourself Australian.”
Eight words. One sentence. A whole country forced to look in the mirror.
In the immediate aftermath of one of the most painful and controversial first-round losses in recent Australian Open history, Alex de Minaur did something very few people expected.
Instead of staying silent or joining the wave of criticism, the world No. 8 and Australia’s highest-ranked male player chose to stand up — publicly, clearly, and emotionally — for his much younger compatriot Tristan Schoolkate.
Schoolkate, the 24-year-old wildcard from Perth, had just suffered a brutal collapse in his Australian Open debut. After taking a commanding two-set lead against France’s Corentin Moutet, he failed to capitalize on the Frenchman’s visible leg injury and eventually lost in four sets. The defeat was bad enough. What followed was far worse.
In the immediate aftermath of one of the most painful and controversial first-round losses in recent Australian Open history, Alex de Minaur did something very few people expected.