2024-07-12 22:25:02
Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz is back in the Wimbledon final — and he could be headed for a delicious rematch with rival Novak Djokovic.
The No. 3 seed took out No. 5 Daniil Medvedev, 6-7(1), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, for the second straight year in the semifinals to advance to Sunday’s championship match. Alcaraz improved to 17-2 for his career at Wimbledon.
Alcaraz, who has won 13 straight matches at Wimbledon and 13 straight major matches including his title at the French Open, will face either 24-time major champion and No. 2 Djokovic or No. 25 Lorenzo Musetti in the final.
Alcaraz leads Djokovic 3-2, including last year’s Wimbledon final, and leads Musetti 3-1.
“I feel like I’m not new anymore,” Alcaraz said of returning to the final. “I feel like I know how I’m going to feel before the final, I’ve been in this position before. I will try to do the things that I think won last year and try to be better and try obviously to do the things that went well.
“It’s going to be obviously a really good day for Spanish people as well [with the UEFA
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Alcaraz, a three-time major champion, improved to 5-2 against Medvedev, whose lone career Grand Slam title came at the 2021 U.S. Open.
Alcaraz broke the Russian on 6-of-15 chances, while Medvedev was 3-of-3 on break chances.
Things started out well for Medvedev. He broke Alcaraz at love for 3-1 in the first set when the Spaniard sailed a forehand wide.
Alcaraz struggled with his serve early and Medvedev broke again for a 4-2 lead.
But while serving for the first set at 5-3, 30-40, Medvedev came close to being defaulted when he cursed out the chair umpire while disputing a not-up call. She also discussed it with the tournament director.
Medvedev dominated the tiebreak en route to a one-set lead, taking it with a service winner.
After Alcaraz took the second set, he earned a break for 2-1 in the third when Medvedev curled a forehand wide.
Alcaraz continued to improve his serve through the third set en route to a two-sets-to-one lead.
Alcaraz broke early in the fourth for a 1-0 lead with a massive forehand crosscourt winner.
After giving the break back, Alcaraz broke for 4-3 when Medvedev reached for a two-handed backhand and sailed it long.
Serving for the match at 5-4, Alcaraz hit a service winner toward the doubles alley to bring himself to match point at 40-30.
On match point, he hit a forehand winner that Medvedev returned wide. And the two men met at the net before Alcaraz clapped to the crowd.
“I’m really happy about my performance today,” Alcaraz said on court. “I started really, really nervous. I think he was dominating the match, playing great tennis with his serves, his return game. It was difficult for me but I tried to pull out all the nerves at the beginning of the second set.
“After that, I could play my own game, I could enjoy a little bit more the match…I think in general I played a really good match.”