All hail Alcaraz as he ends Djokovic's long Wimbledon reign in thriller
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s[July 17, 2023]
By Pritha Sarkar
LONDON (Reuters) -Carlos Alcaraz heralded the changing of the guard
in men's tennis as he ended Novak Djokovic's long reign at Wimbledon
with a rip-roaring 1-6 7-6(6) 6-1 3-6 6-4 victory to win the All
England Club title for the first time on Sunday.
The 36-year-old Serbian had been indestructible on Wimbledon's
Centre Court for a decade but finally met his match as he ran out of
ideas to stop young gun Alcaraz from hurtling towards the title.
After the 20-year-old had broken for a 2-1 lead in the fifth set
with a stupendous passing shot winner, Djokovic's racket felt the
full force of his anger as he smashed it against the wooden net post
to leave it in a mangled mess.
That earned Djokovic a second warning in the contest, with the world
number two having also been cautioned earlier for taking too much
time to launch into his serves.
All that distraction failed to throw Alcaraz off course as he became
the youngest man since 18-year-old Boris Becker in 1986 to win the
Challenge Cup after Djokovic scooped a forehand into the net,
leaving the Spaniard to collapse on to his back in his moment of
triumph.
"It's a dream come true for me. It's great to win ... making history
in this beautiful tournament," Alcaraz said as he cradled the trophy
during the presentation ceremony.
To sum up what it meant to play a part in a match billed as the
"collision of generations" Alcaraz then paid tribute to the man who
was denied a fifth Wimbledon title in a row.
"I have to congratulate Novak. It's amazing to play against him. You
inspire me. (When) I was born, you were winning tournaments."
FAST START
Djokovic, who won his first ATP title when Alcaraz was three years
old, looked well on his way to winning a men's record-equalling
eighth Wimbledon crown when he blew away his rival in the opening
set.
Playing in front of James Bond actor Daniel Craig, Djokovic must
have thought he had left his rival shaken and stirred as he scorched
into a 5-0 lead in the blink of an eye.
But once Alcaraz had managed to loosen his limbs and register his
name on the scoreboard after 32 minutes, the contest the world was
waiting to see finally came alive.
Showing he was ready and waiting to tame the man he had described as
"physically a beast; mentally a beast" in the run up to the final,
the Spaniard broke for the first time for a 2-0 lead in the second.
But Djokovic is not known for being a human backboard for nothing
and, with so much riding on this result - the Serbian was also
looking to draw level with Margaret Court's all-time record haul of
24 majors - he let out a mighty roar that shook Centre Court when he
broke back in the next game.
That got the adrenaline pumping through both players as they were
soon caught up exchanging brutal strokes in a breathtaking 29-shot
rally that ended with Alcaraz firing a backhand long.
With the fans hollering after every Alcaraz winner, and the
Serbian's errors, a defiant Djokovic cupped his ear urging the crowd
to show him a bit of respect.
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Tennis - Wimbledon - All England Lawn
Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - July 16, 2023 Spain's
Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with the trophy after winning his final
match against Serbia's Novak Djokovic REUTERS/Toby Melville
HIGH DRAMA
The second set was dripping with drama as Djokovic was left slipping
and sliding time and again as he tried to cope with a feast of
Alcaraz dropshots that kept coming his way.
At 3-3, Djokovic was left rolling on the turf after he stumbled over
while chasing down one such effort.
Although he managed to get the ball over the net, he was still lying
flat on his back and could only watch in awe as the ball came back
into his half of the court after Alcaraz volleyed a winner with
almost his back to the net.
The cheering crowd leapt to their feet to salute the young pretender
who was starting to feel more and more at home on the slick surface
as he looked to end Djokovic's incredible 34-match winning streak on
the most famous stage tennis has to offer.
With neither player daring to blink, the set rolled into a tiebreak
where Djokovic was left quietly fuming on the baseline at 4-5 down
after getting a time violation warning from umpire Fergus Murphy for
taking more than the allowed 25 seconds.
Two points later the Serbian stood on the cusp of grabbing a
two-sets-to-love lead but it was not meant to be.
Instead, Alcaraz was saluted by the roaring crowd as he produced a
blazing down the line service return to win one of the highest
quality sets seen at this year's championships.
The chants of "Carlos, Carlos, Carlos" rose to a crescendo when, at
3-1 up in the third set, Alcaraz stretched Djokovic to 13 deuces
before finally breaking on his seventh break point in a mental and
physical battle that dragged on for 26 minutes.
That punched a hole through Djokovic's aura of invincibility and,
although the second seed came back to take the fourth set, his mind
and body let him down in the fifth, leaving U.S. Open champion
Alcaraz to celebrate a second Grand Slam triumph.
"I thought I'd have trouble with you only on clay and hard courts
but maybe not on grass but now it's a different story from this year
obviously. Congrats. Amazing way to adapt to the surface," Djokovic
told his conqueror.
"You played maybe once or twice before this year's Wimbledon on
grass and it's amazing just what you did."
(Reporting by Pritha Sarkar, editing by Toby Davis and Ken Ferris)
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