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One tennis grand slam does not a legend make, but Carlos Alcaraz has begun the journey

Less than four years after he began playing as a professional, Carlos Alcaraz has won his first tennis grand Slam title and reached the top of the men’s singles rankings. Can he sustain the momentum? And will he prevail over the Big 3 in a final?

September 13, 2022 / 12:34 IST
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Spain's Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with his trophy after winning the 2022 US Open Tennis tournament men's singles final match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.
Spain's Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with his trophy after winning the 2022 US Open Tennis tournament men's singles final match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York.

Carlos Alcaraz, the newly crowned US Open men’s singles champion, is the youngest ever men’s singles tennis No.1 in the world. But had it not been for Covid, he would have gotten there sooner, his coach Juan Carlos Ferrero said at a press conference at Flushing Meadows, New York, minutes after his ward won the men’s singles title and his first-ever Major.

Having tasted success on the ITF’s Men’s World Tennis Tour circuit throughout 2019 (Alcaraz made his debut in late 2018), he won his first professional tour tennis match at the Rio Open in Brazil in February 2020. Just as Alcaraz, who hails from Spain, was ready to graduate from playing in entry-level tournaments (ITF circuit) and the challenger circuit (a step above the ITF circuit but lower than the main ATP tour), Covid-19 struck.

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Asked if Alcaraz could have risen to the top had Covid-19 not interrupted play worldwide, Ferrero said: “Could be, could be… because he was about to play at Indian Wells, Miami, and some of the other big tournaments that were big. We had to stop for three months (in 2020) and then go back to playing the Challenger tournaments…”

Ferrero was a former no.1 men's singles player himself and has won the French Open (Roland Garros) title in 2003.