Tennis-Alcaraz ready for Grand Slam defence at Wimbledon after surging into elite group


  • Tennis
  • Wednesday, 26 Jun 2024

Tennis - Queen's Club Championships - The Queen's Club, London, Britain - June 18, 2024 Spain's Carlos Alcaraz in action during his round of 32 match against Argentina's Francisco Cerundolo Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs

(Reuters) - Carlos Alcaraz propelled himself into the Grand Slam all-surface elite following his triumph at Roland Garros and will arrive at Wimbledon hoping to further cement his place in the big league by successfully defending a major title for the first time.

The 21-year-old overcame a forearm issue to bag his first French Open title, emulating greats including Rafa Nadal, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andre Agassi with major wins on clay, hard and grass courts.

Alcaraz's triumph on the Parisian red dirt was the third Grand Slam trophy of his young career and followed the Spanish world number three's breakthrough title at the 2022 U.S. Open and epic Wimbledon victory 12 months ago.

The latter success stood out for the way Alcaraz quickly adapted to his least familiar surface by winning back-to-back titles after arriving for the 2023 British grasscourt season with only a handful of tour-level match wins on grass.

"I have more matches in my bank on grass and with the great run I had last year at Queen's Club and Wimbledon, I know a bit on how to play and understand the game on grass," said Alcaraz, who beat Djokovic in five sets in last year's Wimbledon final.

"I'm more mature playing on this surface. The first practice I've done here, my movement wasn't as good as last year but it's a slow process. I have to be really focused in every practice and every match."

Blessed with a forehand cannon and an all-action style that can often overwhelm the best in the game, the flamboyant Alcaraz will be one of the favourites at the All England Club despite his Queen's Club title defence ending prematurely last week.

Competing without coach Juan Carlos Ferrero in his corner, Alcaraz was beaten in straight sets by inspired home favourite Jack Draper in the round of 16 but he vowed to return stronger at the manicured lawns of Wimbledon on July 1.

"It's tough to deal with losses, but I think it's part of our lives," said Alcaraz, who has a 17-3 record on grass.

"After losses, you have to take the positive things and of course the negative things to improve for the next tournament. Right now I'm hungry just to be better.

"I'm really excited to start Wimbledon. I really want to win every title and Wimbledon is even more special. I have time, and I'm excited to start the first match on Centre Court."

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tennis

Tennis-Skipping Wimbledon warm-ups was the smarter decision, says Swiatek
Tennis-Djokovic upbeat for Wimbledon after testing knee to maximum
Tennis-Confident Gauff ready to put last year's Wimbledon setback behind her
Tennis-Alcaraz sharpened grass game after Queen's defeat
Tennis-Confident Raducanu happy to be back on Wimbledon grass
Tennis-The numbers that make a Wimbledon champion
Tennis-Top seed Sinner in good heart after Halle title
Tennis-Shnaider outplays Vekic to win Bad Homburg Open
Tennis-Wimbledon is now a realistic target, says Zverev
Tennis-Injured Sabalenka not 100% ready for Wimbledon but refuses to give up hope

Others Also Read