Zverev drops set on way to Australian Open second round
World number three Alexander Zverev dropped a set before reaching the Australian Open second round Sunday in a shaky start to his bid to make another final at the season-opening Grand Slam.
The German, who lost in three sets to Jannik Sinner in the 2025 tournament decider, ground past 41st-ranked Canadian Gabriel Diallo 6-7 (1/7), 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 on Rod Laver Arena.
It put him into round two at Melbourne Park for a tenth straight year as he looks to disrupt the domination of Sinner and world number one Carlos Alcaraz, who have shared the last eight major titles.
But he had to work hard to tame the lanky 24-year-old, who showed his potential with a maiden ATP title last year.
"Definitely wasn't happy when I saw the draw," he said.
"He's very talented and unbelievably aggressive. It was hard to find my rhythm."
Zverev was broken early and slumped 4-1 behind in the opening set, struggling with the Canadian's booming serve.
Diallo went 40-0 up on his own serve with a chance to take a 5-2 lead, but the German dug deep to haul himself back to 4-4.
He saved a set point at 4-5 and it went to a tiebreak, where it was all Diallo.
Zverev regrouped at the changeover and came out firing, racing 4-0 clear with a double break to power through set two in 31 minutes and dial up the pressure.
Zverev scored a crucial break in the seventh game of set three when Diallo fluffed a forehand from the baseline and took control as his opponent's error count surged.
Another break on Diallo's first service game in set four set Zverev on his way to sealing the match.
His reward is a clash next with either Australian world number 49 Alexei Popyrin or 50th-ranked Frenchman Alexandre Muller.
The 28-year-old Zverev finished the 2025 season with only one title, in Munich, having been beset by injuries.
It was enough to end as number three in the world behind Alcaraz and Sinner, but he disappointed at the other three Grand Slams with a major title still elusive.
Should he finally triumph in Melbourne on his 40th Slam appearance, Zverev will go second on the Open era list for most attempts before winning a Grand Slam title.
Goran Ivanisevic holds the record, winning Wimbledon in 2001 on his 48th attempt.
S.Esposito--LDdC