Gazeta Buenos Aires - Shelton plans to ride on 'rowdy' Melbourne crowd to stun Sinner

NYSE - LSE
SCS 0.12% 16.14 $
NGG 0.18% 85.2 $
BCC 0.77% 80.79 $
BCE 1.3% 25.82 $
RIO -4.55% 90.99 $
GSK 1.92% 51.645 $
CMSD 0.33% 24.14 $
RYCEF -2.69% 16 $
RELX -1.32% 35.695 $
RBGPF 1.65% 83.78 $
CMSC 0.02% 23.7 $
JRI 0.57% 13.029 $
BTI 0.68% 60.625 $
VOD -0.61% 14.621 $
AZN 0.31% 92.88 $
BP -0.48% 37.86 $
Shelton plans to ride on 'rowdy' Melbourne crowd to stun Sinner
Shelton plans to ride on 'rowdy' Melbourne crowd to stun Sinner / Photo: Martin KEEP - AFP

Shelton plans to ride on 'rowdy' Melbourne crowd to stun Sinner

All-action American Ben Shelton plans to harness the energy of a "rowdy" Australian Open crowd to pull off a shock in the quarter-finals against two-time reigning champion Jannik Sinner.

Text size:

The United States eighth seed beat 12th-seeded Norwegian Casper Ruud to book a clash with Italy's Sinner on Wednesday.

The 23-year-old Shelton revels in the atmosphere at Melbourne Park, where he reached the semi-finals last year only to lose in straight sets to Sinner.

"I'm definitely a competitor, I'm rowdy on court, I look forward to rowdy crowds, and down here in Australia there's no shortage," he said after seeing off Ruud in four sets in Monday's late-night match at Rod Laver Arena.

Shelton found himself on centre court after Novak Djokovic's last-16 encounter with Jakub Mensik fell by the wayside when the Czech player pulled out injured.

Some fans were disappointed not to see 10-time Australia champion Djokovic -- something Shelton was aware of.

"I want to thank you guys for staying out here so late," he told the arena in his on-court interview afterwards.

"I know you guys were probably looking forward to watching Novak tonight," he added, to cheers and a couple of boos.

"I actually heard it from the stands, but I hope we didn't disappoint with that match."

Shelton celebrated beating Ruud with his trademark "dialled in" motion of pretending to slam down a landline telephone.

Sinner and Shelton have met nine times, with the world number two winning eight of them.

Shelton's only victory over the four-time major winner came in their first encounter, in 2023.

But in a warning to Sinner, Shelton said: "I have a lot more to do here and a lot more to improve."

P.A.Villalba--GBA