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An attack on a camera could cost iDaniil Medvedev some prize money but the Russian is just happy not to be flying home after a round-one Australian Open scare.
World No.5 Daniil Medvedev is preparing for his wallet to be lighter after clawing his way into the Australian Open second round with a five-set victory over rank outsider Kasidit Samrej.
Without a lead-up tournament under his belt after the birth of his second child, the three-time defeated Open finalist was forced to dig deep to win 6-2 4-6 3-6 6-1 6-2 over Thai wildcard Samrej in three hours and eight minutes.
The world No.418, just the third Thai to make a grand slam singles main draw in the open era, pinched the second set off Medvedev after the Russian raced through the first in 30 minutes.
The oft-temperamental hard-court specialist fell into a bigger hole by dropping the third set and took his mounting frustration out on a net camera, smashing it and his racquet to earn a warning from the chair umpire.
Medvedev said he expected to be fined more than the typical amount for run-of-the-mill racquet abuse.
"The fine is usually for breaking the racquet," he said.
"The camera is going to cost some, but I don't think (a) Go Pro is that expensive.
"What I have to say is the camera was very, very strong, because (my) racquet didn't handle the damage, but the camera did."
Down two sets to one, Medvedev leaned on his five-set Open record, having previously won five of his eight contests that went the distance, to force a decider and break open the match.
"I know that I play better when I play more tennis," he joked to the Rod Laver Arena crowd.
"So I was like why play one hour and 30 (minutes), I need minimum three hours to feel my shots better."
Samrej earned his Open spot with four wins in the Asia/Pacific wildcard playoff in November and did not look overawed by the calibre of his opponent, who had never lost to a lower-ranked player.
Medvedev said he watched footage of the 23-year-old's matches in preparation and did not witness the level he produced on Tuesday.
"I was surprised," the Russian said.
"If he plays like this every match, his life can be good. Money, girls, casino."
Medvedev, who next faces 19-year-old American qualifier Learner Tien after he also won a five-set battle over Argentine Camilo Ugo Carabelli, failed to win a single title on tour last year.
His attempts to add to his sole grand slam - the 2021 US Open title - have been compromised by the ascension of young guns Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz.
It was groundhog day for Medvedev in the Open final last year when Sinner recovered from two sets down to hoist his maiden major championship trophy.
He lost in painfully similar circumstances to now-retired legend Rafael Nadal in the 2022 decider after his straights-sets defeat at the hands of Novak Djokovic a year earlier.