Great Britain's hopes of Grand Slam singles glory at the 2024 Australian Open have been extinguished thanks to Alexander Zverev's enthralling five-set win over Cameron Norrie in Monday's fourth-round match.
The British number one went toe-to-toe with his more esteemed foe but lost his way in the final 10-point tie-breaker, as Zverev came through 7-5 3-6 6-3 4-6 7-6[3] in four hours and five minutes.
Competing in the fourth round of the Australian Open for the very first time, Norrie earned a date with Zverev by virtue of a statement third-round win over Casper Ruud, but he went into the contest 0-4 against the German on the ATP Tour.
After being broken in the 11th game of the match, Norrie crucially missed a chance to break straight back while Zverev was serving for the set, and the German also drew first blood for a 3-2 advantage in the second.
However, Norrie suddenly found a second wind as he triumphed in four successive games to level the match, beating away four break points while serving for the set, but he failed to recover after going 4-1 down in the third.
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The match was briefly interrupted by a protestor throwing flyers - which read 'Free Palestine' - onto the court, but as Zverev's first-serve percentage dropped in the fourth set, Norrie capitalised to take the fourth-round tie to the distance.
The pair exchanged breaks in the decider, which would be settled by a winner-takes-all tie-breaker, but untimely mistakes were Norrie's downfall in the final battle as Zverev punched his ticket to the quarter-finals.
The German's last-eight foe will be Carlos Alcaraz, who was a much more convincing victor in his clash with Miomir Kecmanovic, utilising his blistering forehand to magnificent effect in a 6-4 6-4 6-0 win.
The second seed won 83% of points behind his first serve and ended the three-set battle with 42 winners - 29 more than Kecmanovic, who did not bring up a single opportunity to break the Wimbledon champion.
Zverev and Alcaraz will lock horns for the chance to face either Daniil Medvedev or Hubert Hurkacz in the last four, with the former recovering from a third-set blip to get the job done against Portugal's Nuno Borges 6-3 7-6[4] 5-7 6-1.
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Meanwhile, Hurkacz ended Arthur Cazaux's breakthrough Grand Slam journey with a 7-6[6] 7-6[3] 6-4 beating of the 21-year-old French wildcard, whose barrage of aces - 18 to be exact - proved fruitless.
In the women's singles fourth-round matches, Ukrainian 19th seed Elina Svitolina left the court in tears just three games into her clash with Linda Noskova, being forced to retire at 3-0 down with a back injury.
However, there was elation for Svitolina's compatriot Dayana Yastremska, as the qualifier stunned Belarusian 18th seed Victoria Azarenka 7-6[6] 6-4, becoming just the second women's singles qualifier to beat two major winners in a single Grand Slam tournament in the Open Era.
Finally, Italian 26th seed Jasmine Paolini was no match for Russia's Anna Kalinskaya, who ran out a 6-4 6-2 victor, and she will now take on China's Qinwen Zheng thanks to the 12th seed's dominant 6-0 6-3 win over an off-colour Oceane Dodin.
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