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Poland shoot out Australia, earn right to exact revenge against US for last year’s final loss

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Published: January 9, 2026 at 6:31 pm

Poland won the decisive mixed doubles against home side Australia in the United Cup quarterfinals in Sydney on Friday night. The Poles, thereby, earned the chance to avenge last year’s final loss to the United States.

After Iga Swiatek and Alex de Minaur claimed contrasting singles wins for their countries earlier in the evening, Jan Zielinski produced a masterclass with Katarzyna Kawa to seal Poland’s victory with a 6-4, 6-0 win over John-Patrick Smith and Storm Hunter.

Advancing to the semifinals for the fourth consecutive year, Poland will get a shot at defending champion United States on Saturday night when the singles matchups, Swiatek against Coco Gauff and Hurkacz against Taylor Fritz, are a repeat of the 2025 final. Last year Gauff won 6-4, 6-4 while Hurkacz suffered a heartbreaking third-set tie-break loss to Fritz.

In a dramatic tie, on Friday, in front of a highly partisan Australian crowd, De Minaur produced one of the grittiest opening-set performances of his career to set up a 6-4, 4-6 6-4 win over Hurkacz and send the last quarterfinal to the deciding mixed doubles.

The World No. 6 saved all nine break points he faced across his first four service games, including four in the second game of the match, to keep Australia alive after former World No. 1 Iga Swiatek brushed aside Aussie teen Maya Joint 6-1, 6-1.

“Nights like these… these are just the best,” De Minaur said. “I love playing here. The atmosphere from the first ball to the last was amazing. “I just had to fight him off from the first point to the last. It was a huge mental effort and we’re still alive. I’m glad I was able to bounce back after losing that second set. I had some dark thoughts in my head.”

Playing his first tournament since last year’s grass season, Hurkcaz was near untouchable in his first three service games when he dropped just one point on serve. But growing increasingly frustrated by his inability to cash in on his chances in return games, his unforced error count ticked up in the closing stages of the set.

After De Minaur saved three break points to level at 4-4, the 26-year-old claimed the decisive break and then won 21 consecutive points on serve before unexpectedly dropping serve at the end of the second set.

But inspired by deafening roars from Aussie fans inside the Ken Rosewall Arena, De Minaur went into lockdown mode with just two unforced errors in the final set en route to his eighth victory in 11 United Cup singles appearances.

Swiatek overpowers Joint to give Poland early lead

Earlier, Swiatek overpowered Australia rising star Joint, capturing a convincing 6-1, 6-1 win in just 57 minutes at the quarterfinals. From start to finish, the World No. 2’s experience prevailed as the Swiatek earned her second career win over Joint: Swiatek won 6-0, 6-2 in the Seoul semifinals, a tournament she’d go on to win. Swiatek also earned her 15th singles win at the United Cup.

“I think the intensity, the balls get quite heavy so I’m happy that I was always pushing forward,” Swiatek said on court. “I got pretty confident at the end so for sure it was a good match.”

Joint held serve to have an initial 1-0 lead, but after, the Swiatek show ensued. The six-time Grand Slam champion overwhelmingly controlled the rallies, often forcing Joint to scramble from side-to-side just to keep the rally alive.

Swiatek won six straight games to win the first set with a breadstick in 26 minutes and had garnered “Iga” chants from her Polish supporters early on into the match. Her set point, a cross-court forehand winner that sped past an outstretched Joint, summed up the match best.

In the second, Swiatek and Joint traded holds, the latter of which earned some encouragement from the home crowd. Similarly, Swiatek recaptured the lead with a break, and didn’t look back, on way to the double breadstick win.

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