Australian Open, Day 10 Highlights: Alcaraz through to quarters, Svitolina knocks Gauff out

Hello and welcome to the live coverage of Day 10 of the Australian Open 2026.
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz triiumphs
Carlos Alcaraz is through to his maiden Australian Open semi-final after a commanding win over Alex de Minaur, 7-5, 6-2, 6-1, at Rod Laver Arena.
The young Spaniard was in complete control, steadily breaking down de Minaur’s resistance as the match progressed. Up next, Alcaraz will face Alexander Zverev, who booked his semi-final spot by defeating Learner Tien in the quarter-finals.
Coming up, a first visit to the semi's at Melbourne Park ⌛@wwos • @espn • @tntsports • @wowowtennis • #AO26 pic.twitter.com/qoekKxLSvD
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 27, 2026
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz closing in
Alcaraz is just one game away from sealing the quarter-final! He leads 5-1 after grabbing his second service break of the set, putting himself on the brink of his very first Australian Open semi-final.
De Minaur is under all sorts of pressure now, and it’s all Alcaraz—aggressive, precise, and relentless. Can he close it out in style?
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz in cruise control
Alcaraz has stormed out of the blocks in the third set, immediately capitalizing on an early break to lead 2-0. De Minaur looks completely off the pace, unable to find answers as the Spaniard relentlessly ramps up the pressure.
There’s no respite for Alex—every shot seems to play right into Alcaraz’s hands, and momentum is firmly with the young sensation.
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz wins the second set
Carlos Alcaraz is on the brink of his first Australian Open semi-final, leading Alex de Minaur 7–5, 6–2 at the Rod Laver Arena. The opening set was tight, with de Minaur giving the Spaniard a real test, but Alcaraz shifted gears in the second, running away with it in dominant fashion.
Now the pressure is squarely on the home favourite—he faces a steep mountain if he wants to mount any serious challenge in the third set and keep his quarter-final hopes alive.
Alcaraz, meanwhile, looks calm, composed, and in total control, one set away from making history in Melbourne.
Carlos takes the second set in commanding fashion 💪
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 27, 2026
De Minaur will have to take it to five if he wants a maiden Slam semi.@wwos • @espn • @tntsports • @wowowtennis • #AO26 pic.twitter.com/LXlym0z2Bs
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz a game away from winning 2nd set
Carlos Alcaraz is turning up the heat in the second set! 🔥
The Spaniard hasn’t given Alex de Minaur an inch, racing to a commanding 5–2 lead. De Minaur struggled to hold serve when it mattered in the first set, and the pressure is mounting as he steps up to serve again.
Can the home favourite dig deep and stop Alcaraz from closing in on another set, or will the world No.1 seal it and maintain total control? Every point is crucial now, and the tension on court is palpable.
AUS Open Live: De Minaur opens his account
And Alex de Minaur finally gets on the board in the opening set, trimming the gap to 3–1 after a flying start from Carlos Alcaraz. The Spaniard had stormed ahead 2–0 with an early break and stretched it to 3–0, but de Minaur showed resilience to win his first game.
Still, the Aussie faces a steep climb — he’ll need to snag a break of Alcaraz’s serve if he wants any realistic chance of turning this set around. The intensity is already high, and every point is crucial as the first set begins to swing.
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz takes charge again
And Alcaraz comes out blazing in the second set! 🔥
Picking up right where he left off, the Spaniard converts an early break to move 2–0 ahead. The pressure is now squarely on Alex de Minaur — he’s got to find a way back into this set or risk slipping further behind.
Alcaraz is looking sharp, aggressive, and in total control so far, leaving De Minaur with plenty to ponder as the second set unfolds.
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz wins 1st set
What a set of tennis 🔥
Carlos Alcaraz is absolutely fired up as he takes the opening set 7–5 after a gruelling 58 minutes. Alex de Minaur was fighting to the very end, holding serve when he had to in a bid to force a tie-break, but Alcaraz raised his level at the perfect moment.
De Minaur saved the first set point with sheer grit, but there was no stopping the second — a breathtaking rally finished by Alcaraz, who found something extra when it mattered most.
A statement start from the world No.1, and the intensity is only rising from here
Carlos Alcaraz won the first set against Alex de Minaur at the Australian Open like this.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) January 27, 2026
Downright brilliant tennis.
😮💨😮💨😮💨
pic.twitter.com/k4M6r9fdkN
AUS Open Live: De Minaur earns the break back
Hold everything — we’re not done yet 😮💨
Just as it looked like Carlos Alcaraz was about to close out the opening set, Alex de Minaur has produced a timely response, breaking back to narrow the gap to 4–5.
The crowd is right back in it, momentum swinging once more, and suddenly the pressure shifts to Alcaraz to serve it out again.
With de Minaur sniffing an opportunity, could this set be drifting toward a tie-break? This one is finely balanced now.
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz breaks
Carlos Alcaraz strikes first blood. The world No.1 finds the breakthrough at exactly the right moment, carving out a crucial break of serve to edge ahead 5–3.
The pressure has been relentless, and Alcaraz is now just one game away from sealing the opening set against Alex de Minaur.
The home favourite is staring down the challenge — can de Minaur dig deep, find a response, and keep this first set alive, or will Alcaraz shut the door here? The tension is building at every point
AUS Open Live: Alcaraz in action
Here we go 🔥
Carlos Alcaraz is out on court right now, locked in battle with the home favourite Alex de Minaur, and the atmosphere is absolutely buzzing. The World No. 1 knows exactly what’s at stake — just three wins stand between him and a Career Grand Slam — but de Minaur is making sure nothing comes easy tonight.
The opening set has been electric so far, both players trading blows with real intensity, and we’re deadlocked at 3-3. Momentum swinging, nerves jangling, and not a single point being given away — this one is finely poised.
AUS Open Live: Coco Gauff crashes out
An upset — but one powered by pure Elina Svitolina dominance.
The 12th-seeded Ukrainian lit up Rod Laver Arena, sending the crowd to its feet after brushing aside world No. 3 Coco Gauff 6–1, 6–2 in the women’s singles quarter-final.
Svitolina brought the power, precision and poise — four aces, relentless pressure, and a game plan that left Gauff searching for answers. The American’s 26 unforced errors only widened the gap, as Svitolina bossed proceedings with 22 service points and a classy 19 return points, comfortably outshining Gauff’s 13 and 9.
Upset on paper. Statement on court.
AUS Open Live: Svitolina edges closer to semis
Elina Svitolina is scripting a major upset at the Australian Open. The 12th seed is now just one game away from knocking out world No. 3 Coco Gauff in this women’s singles quarter-final at Rod Laver Arena.
With the first set already secured, the Ukrainian holds a commanding 5–2 lead in Set 2 — and the upset is suddenly very real.
AUS Open Live: Svitolina wins Set 1 vs Gauff
Are we looking at the first major upset of the day?
Elina Svitolina has completely outwitted world No. 3 Coco Gauff, taking the opening set 6–1. The American now needs another turnaround, just like she produced in the Round of 16.
Set 2 promises fireworks — and Rod Laver Arena can feel it.
AUS Open Live: Svitolina puts Gauff on backfoot
Elina Svitolina has raced into a 4–1 lead over third seed Coco Gauff in the opening set of this women’s singles quarter-final.
The American is under pressure early, but if her run so far is any indication, she’s far from done. For now, Rod Laver Arena is firmly enjoying Svitolina’s momentum.
AUS Open Live: Coco Gauff vs Elina Svitolina up next
Day 10 action isn’t done just yet. Up next, world No. 3 Coco Gauff takes on 12th seed Elina Svitolina in their women’s singles quarter-final at Rod Laver Arena.
AUS Open Live: Zverev beats the energetic Tien
Experience triumphs young panache.
After 3 hours and 11 minutes of momentum swings and dazzling shot-making, world No. 3 Alexander Zverev finally sealed a brilliantly competitive men’s singles quarter-final by 6-3, 6 (5)-7, 6-1, 7-6(3), ending the dream run of the ever-promising 20-year-old American Learner Tien.
It was a four-set thriller featuring two tie-breaks, but when it came to the final push, Zverev’s experience — and sheer power — proved decisive. The numbers tell part of the story: 24 aces from the German compared to Tien’s 11, a gap that mattered as fatigue crept in.
Yet this match will be remembered just as much for Tien. Pushing one of the very best to the limit, making him sweat for over three hours, the young American announced himself on the biggest stage — and this feels like only the beginning.
Australian Open: Learner Tien not giving up
Playing his first quarter final at a Grand Slam event, Learner Tien is showing no signs of giving up as he continiues to stay in the game, holding his serves in the fourth set. The American is fighting it hard in the middle as the set seems destined to head into another tie break
Australian Open 2026: Intense 4th set on
The fourth set of the quarter final between Alexander Zverev and Learner Tien has been an even battle so far as both players have held their serves. Zvrerev has won two sets while Tien sealed the second set after an intense tie breaker. The American and the German haven't given an inch to each othe in the ongoing set, which seems headed towards another tie breaker.
AUS Open Live: Zverev bags Set 3 with dominance
An emphatic show of dominance from Alexander Zverev, who storms through Set 3 6–1 against Learner Tien. The young American is now getting a real taste of what it means to battle a world No. 3 at this level.
The first two sets were played largely on even terms, but Set 3 told a different story. Tien looked short of energy in his cross-court movement — perhaps tired legs creeping in — and Zverev pounced instantly, showing zero mercy once that opening appeared.
Can Tien summon another comeback? Or has the physical toll finally caught up with him, making it too much to do it twice in the same match?

