Canadian Auger-Aliassime arrived at Melbourne Park as a genuine dark horse after showing marked improvement on hard courts towards the end of 2025, but the 25-year-old was forced to withdraw when trailing Nuno Borges.
The Portuguese was leading 3-6 6-4 6-4 when Auger-Aliassime was forced to end the contest after he started cramping at the start of the third set.
“It became very difficult to be competitive at this level. I tried for a set but, yeah, wasn’t possible today,” he told reporters, adding that he was not sure if it had to do with the warm conditions.
“I’m not totally finding the reasons why this is happening. It wasn’t happening in the past, so I’ll have to figure it out.
“I want to be on the court winning. I want to be on the court competing with my opponent. I don’t want to be just standing there like a punching bag.”
Stakusic collapses
Australia’s Priscilla Hon advanced to the second round after Canadian qualifier Stakusic collapsed on the court in obvious pain when trailing 5-3 in the deciding set.
As tournament officials helped her on to a wheelchair, Hon showed remarkable sportsmanship by coming to her opponent’s aid, holding Stakusic’s leg to make sure it stayed extended as they wheeled her out of the arena.
“Obviously I didn’t want to win like that,” wild card Hon told reporters.
“I really hope she does feel better. That was quite a scene out there. I had quite a few people come up to me and be, like, ‘Wow, that was so dramatic’.”
However, Hon did not feel the conditions were that bad.
“I’m Australian, so I should be quite used to it,” she said with a smile. “It was definitely warm out there and I think as well with the nerves, the stress levels, it just all impacts it.”
In stoppage time, and with the score level, a penalty was awarded to Morocco after a Video Assistant Referee check.
Jones retires with injury
Britain’s Francesca Jones completed a trio of retirements, withdrawing in tears while trailing Polish qualifier Linda Klimovicova 6-2 3-2 after struggling with a leg injury that had already forced her out of her Auckland quarter-final.
She had trouble with her movement in the first-round match where she took a medical timeout after the opening set and needed the physio to attend to her several times in the second before she told Klimovicova she could not continue.
“I was harbouring a bit of an injury from Auckland in the right leg and, frustratingly, that injury has actually really been quite good, considering it was bigger than we first projected,” a distraught Jones said.
“So I haven’t really played that many points or moved that much in the last 10 days. Unfortunately, 2-1 to 2-2 I went for a slice and the leg that I had injured, I slipped on it and fell.