“Yeah, I hope we get to play in the US Open. Why not? I think it’s good for the sport—one and two in the world facing each other in almost a five-hour, five-set thriller. It couldn’t be better for our sport in general, so why not?” — Novak Djokovic, after Carlos Alcaraz dethroned him on the 2023 Wimbledon last.
Tennis thrives on rivalries, particularly between iconic champions who deal with us to basic matches. The famend Big Three of Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, and Roger Federer produced three of the best rivalries in tennis historical past, surpassed in size solely by the 80-match competitors between legends Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert. All these duels featured champions pretty shut in age, which, partially, accounted for his or her longevity.
The final 4 males’s Grand Slam titles, nevertheless, have been received by 36-year-old Djokovic and 20-year-old Alcaraz. Djokovic’s superior age and Alcaraz’s superior sport guarantee their rivalry received’t final greater than two or three years, however whereas it lasts, it ought to show extraordinarily entertaining and historic.
READ – US Open 2023 males’s draw: Alcaraz vs Sinner, Djokovic vs Tsitsipas amongst projected quarterfinals
Interestingly, the brand new Big Two didn’t conflict at both the 2022 US Open or the 2023 Australian Open for very totally different causes. When Djokovic’s refusal to be vaccinated for COVID-19 denied him entry into the U.S., Alcaraz seized his first main title, taking three late-night, five-set thrillers earlier than overpowering Casper Ruud in a four-set last. And when accidents saved the Spaniard from competing in Melbourne, the Serb romped to the ultimate, the place he outclassed Stefanos Tsitsipas.
Their first Grand Slam showdown got here within the French Open semifinals. It supplied a smorgasbord of scintillating photographs, however just for two units. Unfortunately, full-body cramps then debilitated Alcaraz (under), and Djokovic surged to a 6-3, 5-7, 6-1, 6-1 victory for his twenty third main title, breaking the lads’s document he had shared with Nadal.
Just 5 weeks later, Alcaraz exacted revenge at Wimbledon. A giant Rocky film fan, Alcaraz listens to “The Eye of the Tiger” to fireplace himself up earlier than each match. Alcaraz wanted it within the last as a result of he dropped a dismal opening set 6-1 earlier than recovering for a memorable 1-6, 7-6(6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 triumph to finish Djokovic’s bid for a calendar-year Grand Slam.
Had age lastly caught as much as the tennis GOAT? Or did tremendous athleticism and excessive vitality merely trump effectivity and expertise? And was the Wimbledon last a turning level of their budding rivalry and battle for supremacy?
“I see it as a changing of the guard,” stated three-time Wimbledon winner Boris Becker throughout Eurosport’s Das Gelbe vom Ball podcast. “I see it as a game [match] that will go down in history, and we’ll be talking about it in 10 years. This is the day Carlos Alcaraz came of age, and we’ve seen a lot of praise in the last 48 hours. But who did he do it against? Yes, against the most successful of all time, so not just anyone. Certainly, he won the US Open last year against Casper Ruud in the final and was already No. 1 in the world rankings, even before the tournament. But at the end of the day, you have to show it in a Grand Slam final against the best, and that’s Djokovic. And how did he show it!”
Let’s measurement up contenders who would possibly threaten the Big Two after which predict the winner of the season’s last Grand Slam match:
Jannik Sinner: On the New Gen standouts, Alcaraz stated, “For me, Jannik Sinner is my biggest rival now.” The 21-year-old Italian has received three of their six encounters, exhibiting his floor adaptability by doing it on onerous, grass, and clay courts. All of the Spaniard’s wins have come on onerous courts, most notably his come-from-behind, five-setter on the 2022 US Open.
Elite coach Darren Cahill has inspired Sinner so as to add drop photographs, angles, modifications of tempo, and extra web approaches to his extremely efficient however predictable energy sport. That labored at Wimbledon, the place Sinner reached his first semifinal earlier than Djokovic stopped him 6-3, 6-4, 7-6(4). Succumbing to the strain, Sinner blew two set factors with unforced errors, didn’t convert on six break-point possibilities, and faltered within the tiebreaker. The loss dropped Sinner’s document to an abysmal 0-8 towards top-5 opponents at Grand Slam occasions.
Sinner can’t match Alcaraz in sheer athleticism, shot versatility, or tactical acumen. Who can? But he’ll attain the quarterfinals and maybe the semifinals at Flushing Meadows.
Holger Rune: Like Holger Danske, a Danish resistance group beneath Nazi occupation throughout World War II, this Holger is combative and relentless. He’s tamed his teenage mood and unleashed his huge expertise to notch up wins over Djokovic (twice), Alcaraz, Ruud, Sinner, Tsitsipas, Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev, and Alexander Zverev. An all-court participant whose sport excels on each floor, Rune ranks No. 5 within the ATP “Under Pressure Leaders,” profitable 69.2 of his tiebreakers.
Much just like the six-day-younger Alcaraz, the ruggedly constructed 6’2” Rune radiates ardour when he competes. “I’m living my dream 100 percent. I love tennis,” he stated throughout Wimbledon, the place Alcaraz ousted him 7-6(3), 6-4, 6-4 within the quarters. It marked the primary time within the Open Era that each Wimbledon males’s quarterfinal opponents had been beneath 21.
The Dane’s arsenal accommodates loads of weapons, comparable to a robust first serve, an efficient kick second serve, a sound volley, an improved forehand, and speedy court docket protection. When requested what he’d like from Rune’s sport, Alcaraz replied, “I would love his backhand. His backhand is awesome.”
Unless he runs into the Big Two within the quarterfinals, Rune ought to advance to his first US Open semifinal.
Daniil Medvedev: He’s nicknamed “The Octopus” for his gangly 6’6” body and lengthy arms that appear to encircle and defuse enemy photographs and ship them again. But has The Great Defender been uncovered as The Great Pretender?
Since denying Djokovic a Grand Slam within the 2021 US Open last and dropping the super-close 2022 Aussie Open last to Nadal, the 27-year-old Russian has gone 6-11 towards top-10 opponents, together with three losses to Djokovic and two decisive losses to Alcaraz.
Positioning himself 15 ft behind the baseline and sometimes outdoors the sidelines for serve returns—and in untenable spots throughout rallies—has turn out to be a dropping proposition as his foes drop photographs and drive him to volley, his weak leak. Even so, Medvedev captured 4 tournaments this season, all on onerous courts, his favorite floor.
A beneficial draw would assist No. 3 Medvedev attain the semis, however he might simply get upset earlier than then.
Stefanos Tsitsipas: Despite rating within the prime six for the previous 4 years and profitable 10 tournaments (5 on onerous courts), Tsitsipas, nonetheless solely 25, has plateaued. Stunningly, the good-looking Greek hasn’t defeated a top-15 participant this yr.
What’s gone incorrect? Although Tsitsipas boasts among the finest volleys on the ATP Tour and a strong serve, his crazy, non-penetrating one-handed backhand too usually breaks down on serve returns, passing photographs, and lengthy rallies. To compound the issue, his ways are flawed.
“You have to keep the ball in play and use your athleticism from there,” suggested former No. 1 Jim Courier. “He should take a leaf from [Pete] Sampras’s and Federer’s books.” Both former superstars blocked massive serves again to chop down on return errors slightly than take large backhand backswings.
Tsitsipas’s ways have failed miserably on the US Open, the place he’s received solely 5 matches in 5 appearances. Unless he swallows his pleasure and modifications a dropping sport, he received’t make it to the quarterfinals.
Casper Ruud: The 24-year-old Norwegian’s final title belies his mild-mannered persona. Casper stated his objective is to go his whole profession with out smashing a racket. There was no likelihood of that in 2022 when he loved a profession yr. Ruud made the French and US Open finals and captured clay-court titles at Gstaad, Geneva, and Buenos Aires.
Instead of taking a much-needed relaxation in December, Ruud and his good good friend Nadal went on a profitable exhibition tour in Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Bolivia. All the matches wore him out as a result of this season he’s usually faltered—other than reaching the Roland Garros last once more.
Perhaps Ruud can channel his internal Viking warrior spirit to recapture his 2022 type. Towards that finish, he regarded mighty robust with a sword and defend in a latest picture shoot in Norway.
Two profession stats ought to fear Ruud followers. He’s a woeful 0-14 towards these 5 latest Grand Slam winners—Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Medvedev, and Alcaraz. Further, Ruud has by no means captured a title greater than an ATP Tour 250 occasion.
With a confidence-sapping 5-6 document on onerous courts this yr (as of August 6) and improved younger weapons like Rune and Sinner to fend off, Ruud possible received’t get previous the quarters.
Alexander Zverev: “It’s been the hardest year of my life.” After he defeated Frances Tiafoe within the French Open third spherical, Zverev recalled the horrendous ankle harm he suffered a yr earlier within the semis towards Nadal and his lengthy rehabilitation.
“I love tennis more than anything in the world,” the 26-year-old German stated. “I don’t play for the money or the fame; I play for the pure sport. I play for competitiveness, and I love being in front of [the crowd]. Being away from that, having that taken away from me… I’m so happy to be playing these big battles again.”
In the largest battles throughout his 10-year professional profession, although, the 6’6” rocket first server has seldom competed nicely—other than profitable the Tokyo Olympics and two ATP Finals. On vital factors in must-win video games, all too usually a nervous Zverev has missed makeable volleys, rallied passively, or double-faulted.
He had what he referred to as “a massive chance for us younger guys” to seize his first main title on the 2020 US Open as a result of Nadal and Federer didn’t enter and heavy favorite Djokovic was disqualified for inadvertently hitting a line choose with a ball. However, Zverev squandered a two-set lead within the last towards Dominic Thiem and misplaced a 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-6(6) heartbreaker.
After No. 4 Ruud demolished Zverev on the French Open in June, one stat revealed the latter’s predicament: He’s solely 1-13 versus top-10 opponents at majors (versus 41 top-10 wins in finest 2-of-3-set matches). If Zverev performs the massive factors aggressively, he’ll make the quarters.
Novak Djokovic: Chris Evert is aware of how Djokovic should really feel after Spanish sensation Alcaraz thwarted the Serb’s bid for a record-tying eighth Wimbledon crown, a record-extending twenty fourth main title, and a uncommon Grand Slam this yr. “Novak’s got someone to deal with now, for sure,” Evert, an 18-time main singles champion, instructed The New York Times. “It’s like when Steffi Graf came up and started beating me and Martina [Navratilova]. We saw right away how good she was, and she went on to win more Slams than either of us.”
It’s manner too early in Alcaraz’s profession to foretell if he’ll wind up with extra Slams than any of the Big Three. But Djokovic could make his Slam document more durable to interrupt by turning the tables on Alcaraz and avenging his Wimbledon loss.
After romping to the French Open title in June, Djokovic stated, “36 is the new 26.” He’ll get one other likelihood to show that on Sunday, September 10. The wager right here is that, as soon as once more, youth will trump expertise.
Carlos Alcaraz: “It’s great for the new generation to see me beating him and making them think that they are capable of doing it,” Alcaraz stated after upsetting Djokovic within the dramatic, five-set Wimbledon last.
Those encouraging phrases mirror Alcaraz’s beneficiant spirit as a result of he’s a sui generis champion, as Djokovic was fast to acknowledge. “I haven’t played a player like him ever, to be honest,” Djokovic stated. “Roger and Rafa have their strengths and weaknesses. Carlos is a very complete player.”
Besides being very full technically, Alcaraz is precociously astute tactically. Add his terrific athleticism—particularly his dazzling pace—and his potential to excel on massive factors and in deciding units, and you’ve got a participant the tennis world has by no means seen earlier than.
If these attributes aren’t already sufficient to dominate the game, Alcaraz has a secret weapon to launch the strain when the strain reaches a crescendo. “Smiling for me, as I said a few times, is the key to everything.”
Alcaraz will make us smile aplenty this fortnight at Flushing Meadows as he captures his second US Open and third Grand Slam crown.
Dark Horses: Andrey Rublev, Arthur Fils, Christopher Eubanks, Jiri Lehecka, and Sebastian Korda
WOMEN — MUSICAL CHAIR
“It’s like watching a movie, and you don’t know what’s going to happen. That’s the beauty of tennis.” — Ons Jabeur
What occurred to the so-called Big Three of ladies’s tennis? When Elena Rybakina received the 2022 Wimbledon and Aryna Sabalenka received the 2023 Australian Open, defeating Rybakina within the last, these tall energy hitters created a brand new trio, becoming a member of No. 1-ranked Iga Swiatek on the prime of the game. Or so we thought.
Sure, Swiatek stays in a category of her personal on clay, very like the younger Rafael Nadal, her girlhood idol. But on grass and onerous courts, the argument went, Rybakina and Sabalenka had been now the clear favourites.
ALSO READ – US Open 2023 girls’s draw: Swiatek vs Gauff, Sabalenka vs Jabeur amongst projected quarterfinals
Not so quick! Wimbledon demonstrated, at the least on grass, that supremacy continues to be up for grabs, or, as Jabeur put it, “You don’t know what’s going to happen.” Jabeur, an undersized (5’6”), artful Tunisian, did the heavy lifting by upsetting No. 2 Sabalenka and No. 3 Rybakina, solely to be upset herself within the last by an 80-1 longshot towards Marketa Vondrousova.
My tennis good friend Clara Clairvoyant knowledgeable me that the order shall be restored on the comparatively quick onerous courts on the US Open. Let’s take an in depth have a look at the Big Three and their possible challengers, after which predict the champion.
Coco Gauff: Since making her solely Grand Slam last on the French Open final yr, The Great American Hope has had blended outcomes. Gauff, nonetheless solely 19, didn’t advance previous the quarters at a significant, however she edged Sabalenka and Rybakina—each by 7-6 within the third set—at Toronto in 2022 and received titles at Auckland, Washington, D.C., and Cincinnati this season.
After a disappointing first-round loss at Wimbledon, Coco rebounded in Washington with resounding victories over Olympic gold medalist Belinda Bencic 6-1, 6-2, defending champion Liudmila Samsonova 6-3, 6-3, and No. 9 Maria Sakkari 6-2, 6-3.
Gauff has a brand new workforce of full-time coach Pere Riba and non permanent marketing consultant Brad Gilbert, who’s famend for igniting Andre Agassi to greatness. They’ve improved her serve and forehand, instructed her to take extra time between factors when she’s struggling, and satisfied her to play extra aggressively.
Gilbert additionally inspired Gauff to have extra enjoyable. “Then I realise these emotions are building up, and I’m not having fun,” stated Gauff. “So now I’m just like, ‘I’m going to let it happen; play into the crowd.’ I want to have fun playing tennis, and I think I lost that for a little bit. But I’m really finding it.”
Don’t be shocked if the brand new and relaxed Gauff, impressed by roaring, partisan followers at Flushing Meadows, reaches the semifinals.
Jessica Pegula: “I would love to crash the big three party, if possible. That would be definitely a goal,” stated world No. 3 Pegula. To obtain that, the 29-year-old American must fare a lot better on the majors, the place she’s by no means gone previous the quarterfinals in six makes an attempt. That Pegula has captured solely two WTA titles additionally displays her comparatively low ceiling.
In Pegula’s 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 Wimbledon quarterfinal loss to Vondrousova, she led 4-1 and had a break level for 5-1 within the deciding set however missed a makeable backhand, her finest shot. Though her groundstrokes are rock-solid, they’ve one of many lowest spin charges, round 1,500 rpm, on the WTA Tour, which makes them simpler for opponents to deal with. Even so, Pegula has damaged serve in a sensational 44 % of her return video games. Unlike Rybakina and Sabalenka, she doesn’t have a robust first serve. Her largest weak spot is a second serve, generally lower than 80 mph and poorly positioned. As a outcome, Pegula has held serve solely 71 percentthe time.
Pegula’s tennis idol was Martina Hingis, the very best tactician in girls’s tennis historical past. She would do nicely to emulate Hingis—additionally 5’7” and a nondescript server—by utilizing extra selection and deception. That means extra drop photographs, angles, modifications of tempo, and web approaches.
Until Pegula expands her sport plan, count on extra quarterfinal finishes at majors.
Ons Jabeur: “My game reflects my character,” Jabeur instructed ESPN throughout her run to the Wimbledon last. “I don’t like routine. I like to entertain the crowd.” The smiling sorceress from Tunisia defuses and discombobulates rivals with an audacious array of trick photographs like tweeners and contact photographs like drop volleys and drop photographs.
Pleased together with her versatility throughout her 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-1 quarterfinal victory over Rybakina, Jabeur stated, “I was enjoying using her power and enjoying showing that I’m not one kind of player that only mixes and does drop shots and slices. Also, if you want to hit hard, I’m here to hit as fast as I can. I did show that. Not only to the player, I showed it to myself, too.”
The identical abilities and ways that additionally stymied Sabalenka 6-7(5), 6-4, 6-3 didn’t work within the last. Against Vondrousova, a canny lefty counterpuncher with loads of shot selection, there was nothing to defuse. Nerves, defective shot choice, and a mediocre backhand did within the error-prone Jabeur, as she succumbed 6-4, 6-4.
Jabeur—who reached the US Open last a yr in the past with out beating a top-15 opponent—might turn out to be the primary Tunisian and Arab to win a significant. But it received’t occur on onerous courts. A fourth-round (or earlier) loss is extra possible this yr.
Elina Svitolina: “I think having a child, war, has made me a different person,” the 28-year-old Ukrainian stated after upsetting No. 1 seed, Swiatek, 7-5, 6-7(5), 6-2 within the Wimbledon quarterfinals. “Mentally, I don’t take situations as disasters. There are worse things in life. I’m just calmer.”
Just 10 months after Svitolina, the spouse of former world No. 6 Gael Monfils, gave start to daughter Skai, she turned the feel-good story of The Championships. Besides Swiatek, she defeated three different Grand Slam champions—Venus Williams, Sofia Kenin, and Victoria Azarenka—plus twenty eighth seed Elise Mertens. “After giving birth to our daughter, I think this is the second happiest moment in my life,” Svitolina instructed Centre Court spectators following her 2-6, 6-4, 7-6(9) comeback victory over Belarusian Azarenka.
However, not even cries of “We love you, Elina” from the partisan crowd might ignite a comeback throughout her 6-3, 6-3 semifinal loss to Vondrousova.
Although Svitolina rose to a career-high No. 3 in 2017, she’d by no means reached the ultimate at a significant. While she had no obvious weaknesses, she possessed no distinctive weapons both.
So, Svitolina added extra energy to her sound groundstrokes and serves—she smacked eight aces towards Swiatek—and selection to her relentlessly constant however predictable sport. Her newfound aggression and the fun of motherhood might take Svitolina to a different main semifinal.
Karolina Muchova: At her athletic, versatile finest, the late-blooming Muchova reminds this observer of a mix of fellow Czech Hana Mandlikova—a four-time main winner within the Nineteen Eighties—and former No. 1 Ashleigh Barty.
The 26-year-old Czech lastly began fulfilling her nice potential on the French Open in June, the place Muchova knocked out No. 8 seed Sakkari 7-6(5), 7-5 within the first spherical and surprised No. 2 seed Sabalenka 7-6(5), 6-7(5), 7-5 within the semis.
Muchova confirmed these wins weren’t flukes when she almost upset Swiatek, the Queen of Clay, in a rousing, fluctuating last. After breaking serve for 4-3 within the deciding set, Muchova sabotaged her possibilities with a nasty drop shot error to lose her serve for 4-all and a double fault on championship level to lose 6-2, 5-7, 6-4.
“It just shows me that I can play against them [top players], I can compete, and the matches are super close,” stated Muchova afterwards. That’s one thing of an understatement as a result of, earlier than the dramatic last, she boasted a 5-0 document towards No. 1-ranked opponents—with 4 coming at Grand Slam occasions and on all three surfaces.
Despite her lacklustre 7-5 profession document at Flushing Meadows, Muchova will attain at the least the spherical of 16 and maybe a lot farther this yr.
Iga Swiatek: Besides the very best forehand in girls’s tennis, blazing pace, and intense focus, what makes Swiatek, a four-time main winner at age 22, the No. 1 participant on the earth?
“If I coached a junior player, I’d advise her to look at Iga Swiatek’s footwork,” stated former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki, a Tennis Channel analyst who lately returned to competitors after a three-year layoff. “She’s moving [constantly] to adjust to offense or defense on every point.”
At Wimbledon, nevertheless, low-bouncing slices bedevilled her Western forehand and two-handed backhand.
She lacked both the flexibility or the tactical consciousness to alter a dropping sport in her upset loss to Svitolina.
Furthermore, the 5’9” Pole may be overpowered. Rybakina has defeated her all thrice they’ve performed this yr; Sabalenka has received two of their final three matches; and Jelena Ostapenko owns a 3-0 document towards Swiatek.
Swiatek is terrific in match finals—15-4 general and 4-0 at Grand Slam occasions. But the defending champion received’t make it to this last.
Aryna Sabalenka: Reminder messages abound for Sabalenka to heed. Her coach, Anton Dubrov, wears a T-shirt that claims, “Improvise, Adapt, Overcome.” Sabalenka has a big tiger tattoo on her forearm. How nicely the generally tactically rigid and emotionally fragile Belarusian summons these attributes normally determines her destiny.
Exhibit A: At the Australian Open in January, Sabalenka lastly exorcised her demons as a choking underachiever. She shrugged off the scar tissue from three disappointing main semifinals—dropping all of them 6-4 within the third set—to beat Magda Linette 7-6, 6-2 within the Melbourne semis. Then the heavy-hitting Belarusian rebounded from a gradual begin to vanquish Rybakina 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 for her first Grand Slam title.
Before the ultimate, ESPN analyst Brad Gilbert rightly predicted, “It’s all about serves and nerves.” Sabalenka, who dedicated an astounding 428 double faults in 2022 and is probably the most emotional top-10 participant, mastered each within the largest match of her life.
Exhibits B and C: Ghosts of previous semifinal collapses haunted Sabalenka on the French Open and Wimbledon. At Paris, Karolina Muchova trailed 2-5, love-30 within the deciding set, however Sabalenka’s unforced groundstroke errors in that sport and two pricey double faults at 5-5 helped Muchova prevail 7-6 (5), 6-7 (5), 7-5. In one other psychodrama at Wimbledon, Aryna led Jabeur 7-6, 4-3, 40-30 solely to crumble with two unforced errors and a double fault. She finally misplaced 6-7, 6-4, 6-3.
Which Sabalenka will present up on the US Open? The finest model. But even that received’t be adequate, and he or she’ll lose a three-set thriller within the last.
Elena Rybakina: “She’s an amazing player,” Jabeur stated throughout Wimbledon. “You can see she’s like ‘boom boom’ all the time! There’s no mercy with her.”
Rybakina’s take-no-prisoners energy sport begins with an explosive serve. She leads the WTA Tour with 349 aces (towards solely 118 double faults) and ranks fourth in service video games received (81.1 %). Her booming, flawless groundstrokes are the opposite cornerstones, and he or she kilos them relentlessly into the corners. Another vital stat: Rybakina is an outstanding 12-1 in tiebreakers this season.
The 24-year-old Kazakh doesn’t have Swiatek’s pace or Jabeur’s finesse, however she seldom wants these property as a result of she’s on the offense a lot.
“She reminds me of [former No. 1] Lindsay Davenport because she attacks with the serve and return of the serve, so you’re always under pressure,” stated ESPN analyst Mary Joe Fernandez.
Her favorite floor is tough courts, and her document this yr displays that predilection. She reached the Australian Open last (beating Swiatek, Ostapenko, Azarenka, and Danielle Collins), received Indian Wells (beating Swiatek, Muchova, and Paula Badosa), and made the Miami last (beating Pegula and Badosa).
Although Rybakina has by no means superior previous the third spherical on the US Open, needless to say she by no means went past the fourth spherical at Wimbledon earlier than she received it final yr.
What makes the low-profile Rybakina tick and succeed? “She leads a very quiet life, and she is very happy that way,” stated former celebrity Evert. “She doesn’t want to get out of her bubble.”
Rybakina has greater than sufficient weapons and a great temperament to win her second main title earlier than boisterous—and generally raucous—crowds at Flushing Meadows.
Dark Horses: Jennifer Brady, Liudmila Samsonova, Mirra Andreeva, Qinwen Zheng, and Alycia Parks
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Source: sportstar.thehindu.com