Alcaraz enters all-surface elite
with French Open triumph
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[June 10, 2024]
By Julien Pretot
PARIS (Reuters) -Carlos Alcaraz made a grand entrance into the
tennis history books as he claimed his maiden French Open title to
become the youngest man to capture Grand Slams on all three surfaces
with a see-saw five-set victory over German Alexander Zverev on
Sunday.
The 6-3 2-6 5-7 6-1 6-2 win may not have been a classic, but the
Spaniard showed that he belonged among the elite as he added a third
Grand Slam crown to his impressive trophy cabinet that already has
the 2022 U.S. Open and 2023 Wimbledon titles.
Alcaraz became the seventh man to win a major on hard, grass and
clay courts, a feat that eluded some of the sport's greats,
including American Pete Sampras, who boasts 14 major titles, but
never won at Roland Garros.
At 21 years old, Alcaraz has played in three Grand Slam finals and
won them all, while for comparison, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic
were in their late 20s before they mastered the sport's slowest
surface.
"Since I was little kid, I was running from school to put on the TV
to watch this tournament. Now I am lifting the trophy in front of
all of you," said Alcaraz, who was described by Zverev as a "Hall of
Famer" in his speech.
Sunday's defeat prolonged Zverev's frustration at Grand Slams, with
the German still chasing a first title despite reaching the last
four eight times.
"I'll be back next year," Zverev promised.
In the first men's Roland Garros final not featuring any member of
the Big Three - Rafael Nadal, Djokovic and Federer - in two decades,
Alcaraz and Zverev failed to impress, their lack of consistency
making for a disappointing display.
Alcaraz often looked like he had got the upper hand, only to let it
slip several times, but he ultimately rose to the occasion against
an increasingly frustrated Zverev, who entered the final on the back
of a 12-match winning streak on clay.
The fourth seed has now lost both his Grand Slam finals, after
losing the U.S. Open decider four years ago when he was two points
away from victory against Dominic Thiem.
Alcaraz, who has suffered with bouts of nerves at Roland Garros,
where his compatriot Nadal won a record 14 titles, kept his
composure despite some blips.
On a sun-kissed court Philippe Chatrier, Alcaraz slapped a forehand
winner down the line to snatch the early break, only for Zverev, who
beat an ageing Nadal in the first round, to level for 1-1.
SEE-SAW ENCOUNTER
Alcaraz broke to love then held to move 4-2 ahead before Zverev
staved off a break point, but the Spaniard was a cut above and he
bagged the set on his opponent's serve with a crosscourt forehand
winner.
Alcaraz needed more than 10 minutes to win the first game of the
second set after six deuces.
The 21-year-old's unforced error rate spiked and Zverev broke for
3-2 and, having put his frustration behind him, won three games in a
row to level the contest.
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Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - June 9, 2024
Spain's Carlos Alcaraz celebrates after winning the men's singles
final against Germany's Alexander Zverev REUTERS/Yves Herman
Alcaraz broke in the third set but remained
inconsistent and serving for the set, the Spaniard made yet another
string of errors that allowed Zverev back in the game.
The German seized the opportunity to break twice to go 6-5 up and
serve it out to take the lead in the contest.
In a see-saw encounter, Alcaraz took the early advantage in the
fourth set, breaking for a 2-0 lead with an eye-catching passing
shot and then again for 4-0 with a splendid drop shot.
Yet his level dropped again right after, allowing Zverev to pull a
break back before Alcaraz called the trainer on to have his left
thigh massaged.
The Spaniard managed to wrap up the set to force a decider and a
woeful third game by Zverev gave him the early break.
'UNLUCKY MOMENTS'
Alcaraz raised his level to save four break points in the next game
and go 3-1 up but not before a controversial moment where he sent
down a second serve that was called out, only to be overruled by the
umpire after checks.
"There was some unlucky moments. I heard that at 2-1 the second
serve was out. From the Hawk Eye data I saw that. I break back
there, I have break chances and then in the next service game, a
fifth set can go the other way," Zverev said.
"There's a difference whether you're down 3-1 in the fifth set or
you're back to two-all.
"It's frustrating in the end, but it is what it is. Umpires make
mistakes. They're also human and that's okay. But of course in a
situation like that, you wish there wouldn't be mistakes."
Zverev, who was bidding to become the first German man to win a
singles Grand Slam since Boris Becker in 1996, saw his hopes slip
away on the biggest stage yet again.
Alcaraz broke once more before serving it out and clinching the
title on his first match point.
"When you're playing a fifth set you have to give everything and you
have to give your heart. In those moments, it's where the top
players give their best tennis," Alcaraz said.
"I wanted to be one of the best players in the world, so I have to
give extra in those moments, I have to show the opponent that I'm
fresh, like we're playing the first game of the match."
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Additional reporting by Shrivathsa
Sridhar; Editing by Toby Davis)
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