MELBOURNE, Australia — Throughout seven hours on Friday afternoon, the Australian Open morphed into an American tennis trout farm.
It was practically not possible to observe a singles match with out seeing a crimson, white and blue flag on the scoreboard, as two early-twenty-somethings and one teenager who appears to be like even youthful than his 19 years rumbled by means of the boys’s draw and into the second week.
Did anybody have two Orange County boys, Learner Tien and Alex Michelsen, tearing into the spherical of 16?
They didn’t.
“I used to be down a set and a break within the first spherical of qualies,” Tien, {the teenager} within the group, stated after he had dusted Corentin Moutet of France in three units. “To now be within the second week feels a bit loopy,” he added.
Michelsen had received there first, placing out No. 19 seed Karen Khachanov in three units.
Wins for American ladies sandwiched all this, with Emma Navarro getting by means of to the second week in her third consecutive three-set win to the beginning of the day. Madison Keys received there to finish the night time, beating buddy, compatriot and Australian crowd favourite Danielle Collins.
All that was rather less stunning. Keys and Navarro have been there earlier than, as has Coco Gauff. Tommy Paul’s finest Grand Slam consequence got here in Australia when he reached the semifinals in 2022, and he joined Gauff, Keys and Navarro with a routine win over Roberto Carballes Baena the day past. Paul and Gauff then stored the American mojo rolling even additional, successful their fourth-round matches over Alexander Davidovich Fokina and Belinda Bencic.
Tien, 19, and Michelsen, 20, who will attempt to preserve the vibes alive Monday in Melbourne, are on an increase that’s the reverse of that. Michelsen has some previous kind: he made the third spherical in Melbourne final yr and he has gained a few first-round matches on the U.S. Open within the final two years — however not like this, knocking off two top-20 gamers in three matches.
Tien, a two-time nationwide junior champion, had performed two Grand Slam primary draw matches earlier than this week, a four-set loss to Arthur Fils on the 2024 U.S. Open, and a three-set loss to Tiafoe the yr earlier than. The third time was the attraction. He beat Camilo Ugo Carabelli of Argentina in 5 units
Then the draw handed him two matches in opposition to the arch antagonists of the ATP Tour, much less a baptism of fireside than a mind-bending journey into twisting photographs, beguiling spins and the darkish arts of tennis with the massive boys. Tien took on fifth seed Daniil Medvedev for 5 units and practically 5 hours in a match that ended not lengthy earlier than daybreak. Then got here Moutet, who at two units down reminded Tien that he nonetheless needed to win a 3rd one, which Moutet performed as if hobbled by a hip harm on some factors whereas scrambling throughout the court docket at full velocity on others. Fascinating occasions for a Grand Slam beginner.
“I didn’t actually know what was occurring with him,” Tien stated in his information convention, nonetheless with one foot within the washer.
Add in Ben Shelton’s four-set win over Lorenzo Musetti, the Italian who had overwhelmed him two occasions out of two, and a exceptional statistic seems: that is the primary Grand Slam since 1993 with three American males underneath 23 within the second week. Tien and Michelsen are additionally the primary pair of American males aged 20 or youthful to succeed in the third spherical at a Grand Slam because the 2003 U.S. Open when Andy Roddick and Robby Ginepri, Michelsen’s coach, did it.
It was America’s two most up-to-date main finalists, Taylor Fritz and Jessica Pegula, who discovered the fourth spherical a bridge too far. Gael Monfils produced an immaculate 4 units to knock out Fritz; Olga Danilovic produced two of the identical to take out Pegula.
Sure, it’s a bit bizarre. However perhaps it’s explainable.

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In mid-November, Michelsen and Tien had been banged up. The 2 shut buddies, who play Fortnite collectively of their spare time and who’ve educated on the similar Orange County tennis academy for the previous 4 years, had simply ended lengthy seasons. They’d the standard menu of sore joints from hitting too many balls for too lengthy.
They didn’t boot up the console.
“They mainly put the rackets down for 2 weeks and went to work,” Rodney Marshall, the Southern California tennis health guru who has been working with Michelsen the previous yr, stated throughout an interview from Los Angeles Saturday.
Everybody calls Marshall ‘Rocket’. He’s a kind of consultants in sporting torture that American tennis gamers have trusted with making them quicker and stronger and extra sturdy for 15 years.
Marshall, Michelsen and Tien labored collectively twice a day, six days every week on the academy in California the place they’ve educated collectively the previous 4 years — and on the sands of Aliso Seashore, Calif.
They solely had a small window they usually wanted to determine what kind of incremental good points they may be capable of make. They wished to realize energy of their decrease our bodies and fine-tune their actions, so they may get out and in of the corners of the court docket quicker — an important ability lately.
Tien, who’d missed three months in the course of the first half of the yr with a cracked rib, wanted some extra leverage from his left leg — his again leg on a forehand — to maximise the facility he may unleash from his 5ft 11in (180cm) body. Michelsen, who’s 6ft 5in, wanted to get higher at decreasing his heart of gravity and discovering energy from a squatting place.
Life grew to become an countless sequence of isometrics and plyometrics. The isometrics (holding positions for lengthy stretches) strengthen muscle tissues and tendons; the plyometrics (leaping) construct explosiveness.
Saturdays, they went to the seaside — to do sprints. Marshall introduced an American soccer and despatched them on passing routes throughout the sand, with one performing because the huge receiver and the opposite because the cornerback.
“It was virtually like they had been cramming,” he stated of Tien and Michelsen. “They actually embraced the struggling.” If that line sounds acquainted, it’s for good motive: four-time Grand Slam champion Carlos Alcaraz, 21, credited discovering “pleasure within the struggling” for his French Open title final June.
Fairly quickly, Tien was getting a bit extra oomph when smacking a tennis ball down the road. Michelsen was getting himself right into a ground-level contortion and telling Marshall he may keep there all day. “I find it irresistible down right here,” he’d yell.
“It’s a relentless battle day by day,” Michelsen stated in an interview after his third-round win over Khachanov, his second win over a seed in six days.
“I have a look at Marin Cilic. He was like 6-6, and he was all the time so low. I’ve been making an attempt to copy that.”

Alex Michelsen’s explosiveness from the bottom has been key to his run in Melbourne. (Adrian Dennis / AFP by way of Getty Photos)
On the opposite aspect of the nation, in Florida, Paul was going by means of a health block of his personal with Fritz earlier than the latter headed to southern California for tennis coaching. Frances Tiafoe, Reilly Opelka, Jacob Fearnley and several other different professionals had been with Paul in Florida.
“A very good group,” stated Paul, who usually talks NFL and NBA with Michelsen within the locker room. “He’s a loopy good competitor,” he stated of Michelsen.
Paul stated throughout an interview Friday that he’s decided to play matches on his phrases in 2025. He desires to maneuver different individuals round this season, and never be the one getting moved round as a lot. That all the time appeared to occur final yr when he bumped into Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner. His fast-paced, front-foot tennis may harm them for a short while. He gained a set off Alcaraz at Wimbledon and went up 4-1 up on Sinner on the U.S. Open. However then they might pressure him behind the baseline, and out of the competition.
“Carlos strikes unbelievably effectively when he has to, however in the event you have a look at him when he’s taking part in his finest tennis, he’s dictating,” Paul stated.
Shelton was in Orlando, doing his personal factor. He was making an attempt to determine find out how to go from being a below-average returner to somebody who can get free factors on his serve whereas stopping different guys from getting free factors on theirs.

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From the pre-dawn hours Friday, when Tien was beating Medvedev in a match that ended at 2:56 a.m., till sundown Saturday, when Shelton bested Musetti in a fourth-set tiebreaker, the 23-and-under trio confirmed that the coaching was value it.
Tien received again to his resort after 4 a.m. He ate chilly, stale pizza, and didn’t go to sleep till simply earlier than 7 a.m. He slept until about 1:30 p.m. earlier than making his approach again to Melbourne Park, the place he hit tennis balls mainly standing nonetheless for 45 minutes and endured therapeutic massage and physiotherapy for 5 hours.
He was useless asleep by 11 p.m. “That was a lot wanted,” he stated.
Then he filleted Moutet, doing to the Frenchmen what Moutet had achieved to so many others over time, minus the darkish arts of delay and distraction.
“Unbelievable effort from him right now,” Tien’s coach, Eric Diaz wrote in a textual content message. “Physique was not doing effectively. Spectacular psychological rebound as effectively.”

Learner Tien’s court docket craft has tied his opponents in knots. (Daniel Crockett / AFP by way of Getty Photos)
Shelton had some rebounding to do as effectively. He’d watched his two losses in opposition to No. 16 seed Musetti again and again, reliving the Italian rolling a sequence of backhand passing photographs down the road. Tied at 5-5 in a fourth-set tiebreak, Shelton hit an terrible drop shot that sat up for Musetti’s fearsome working backhand. The purpose appeared misplaced, however Shelton knew what to anticipate. He lined the road, stabbed a volley into the open court docket and served out the match.
He’d spent the afternoon maintaining a tally of the opposite matches, particularly Michelsen.
“Me and Alex are boys,” Shelton stated in his information convention.
“I’ve texted him and advised him he’s a canine after each match that he’s gained as a result of it’s true. He’s a canine. He’s going to be in direction of the highest of the sport very quickly.”
With Shelton watching on, Michelsen successfully sealed his win over Khachanov with three big factors within the second-set tiebreak. All of them had roots within the low season coaching block. He gained the primary with a curving 108mph second serve, a product of the leg energy and jumps. He took the second after sprinting to a ball outdoors the tramlines and whipping a forehand down the road. He gained the third along with his bread and butter, a robust backhand down the road — with a bit further pop from all these drugs ball throws with Marshall and Tien.
As for Tien, Shelton can see a kindred spirit in his fellow left-hander, regardless of their diametrically reverse kinds. Tien’s recreation is all about altering tempo, floating balls deep to the backcourt after which immediately attacking. His tennis is nothing like Shelton’s full-frontal assault, however Tien is breaking by means of right here, out of nowhere, two years after Shelton did on the identical courts.
“Not a foul place to have a breakthrough,” Shelton stated. “On prime of all the fellows which can be already on the prime within the U.S., we’ve got much more coming. It’s actually beginning to present itself.”
Certainly it’s. The trout farm, rather a lot simpler to create in a rich nation with greater than 300 million individuals, is doing what it’s speculated to do. There have been 33 Individuals throughout the singles attracts, extra gamers than every other nation. Because the match strikes into the quarterfinals, there are already two with protected harbor and probably 4 extra on the best way.
Now comes the arduous half: breaking the tape on the end line as Gauff did in New York 16 months in the past. That doesn’t require a trout farm. It requires a unicorn — and there are not any farms able to producing these.
(High photograph: Peter Staples / ATP Tour)