Alcaraz misses out as Zverev and
Ruud complete semifinal field at ATP Finals
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[November 16, 2024]
By ANDREW DAMPF
TURIN, Italy (AP) — Carlos Alcaraz was the big name missing when the
last two semifinal spots were filled at the ATP Finals on Friday.
Alcaraz's 7-6 (5), 6-4 loss to Alexander Zverev meant the French
Open and Wimbledon champion — who has been sick this week — was
eliminated from the elite, eight-man tournament.
In Saturday's semifinals, Zverev will meet Taylor Fritz and
top-ranked Jannik Sinner will play Casper Ruud.
“My goal," Alcaraz said, "(is) to be at the end (of tournaments) all
the time. Every tournament that I’m going to play at least reach the
semifinal, final. So I have to work. ... In 2025, I hope to be a
better player and (have) more consistency.”
Ruud advanced by beating Andrey Rublev 6-4, 5-7, 6-2.
Zverev finished with a perfect three victories to win his
round-robin group. Ruud had two wins, Alcaraz had one and Rublev had
none.
Alcaraz turned on the style in the final game but lost a crucial
point when he couldn’t fully reach a Zverev passing attempt and
ended up sprawled on the court.
“He turns into a different person. He really plays his best at the
most important moments,” Zverev said. “The last game was the most
entertaining game of the match.”
Sinner won the other group ahead of Fritz.
Alcaraz again wore a pink nose strip after struggling with breathing
issues in his opening loss to Ruud.
Zverev leapfrogged Alcaraz to No. 2 in the rankings this week and
took a 6-5 edge in their career meetings.
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Germany's Alexander Zverev celebrates after winning the set point
during the singles tennis match of the ATP World Tour Finals against
Spain's Carlos Alcaraz, at the Inalpi Arena, in Turin, Italy,
Friday, Nov. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
It was a measure of revenge for Zverev, who was
beaten by Alcaraz in five sets in the French Open final.
Zverev has bigger goals than reaching No. 2 for next year.
“It’s no secret, I’m searching for that Grand Slam title. I’m
searching for world No. 1," he said. “If it’s not Roland Garros, but
it’s Australia, I’ll sign the paper right now.”
Alcaraz was already looking ahead to Malaga and next week's Davis
Cup finals, where he will play for Spain in Rafael Nadal's swansong.
“I really want him to retire with a title,” Alcaraz said. “It’s
going to be really, really emotional and a really special tournament
for me.”
Ruud lost his opening match in six of his seven previous
tournaments. But he's into the semifinals for the third time in
three appearances at the finals.
“Tennis is interesting sometimes. I don't know what I'm doing better
this week than the last weeks," Ruud said. "The only thing I can
really feel is serving: I'm serving really good, so hopefully I can
keep it going tomorrow — I'm going to need it.”
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