Alcaraz Outclasses Zverev in Australian Open Semi-final

Carlos Alcaraz fought through a leg issue to deliver a 6-4 7-6 (7-5) 6-7 (3-7) 6-7 (4-7) 7-5 win over Alexander Zverev and reach his first Australian Open final, with the Spaniard somehow managing to keep his career Grand Slam bid alive. The 22-year-old was barely able to move after experiencing a problem midway through the third set, which he lost in a tie-break, and he relied on his sublime ball-striking and placement to land winners and prolong the contest. Alcaraz continued to battle away, seeing off Zverev in the decider and will aim to recover for a meeting with either Novak Djokovic or Jannik Sinner in Sunday’s title clash, where a victory will see him complete his set of majors. After eight straight holds of serve on a sunbathed Rod Laver Arena, Alcaraz was gifted the opening break when Zverev produced a double fault, and the Spaniard won the next game to love and pocketed the opening set. Zverev, who appeared unhappy with the tension in his racket strings at the end of the opening stanza, absorbed more pressure to hold in a 10-minute first game of the next and then built up a 5-2 lead as Alcaraz conceded several loose points. But a backhand bullet helped Alcaraz (above) break back in the ninth game, and the world number one went level in the next, before he dialled up the intensity in the tie-break to double his lead. The six-times major winner then battled to 4-4 in the third set before starting to feel troubled by his right thigh. Switching between big hitting and drop shots, Alcaraz went up 5-4 before taking a medical timeout, leaving a fuming Zverev to remonstrate with the supervisor that his opponent should not be allowed to receive treatment for cramp under the rules, though it was unclear what the leg issue was. Alcaraz soldiered on, holding to go up 6-5 and taking a big swig of pickle juice before giving it his all in the ensuing tie-break, but Zverev showed no mercy and pulled back a set. With his movement slowly improving, Alcaraz pumped his fists to roaring applause after crucial holds in the fourth set to force another tie-break, where Zverev stepped up his serving game to ensure a deciding fifth set. Third seed Zverev broke for an early lead but Alcaraz began to look like his usual self again as he chased down a drop shot at the net and pulled off a stunning winner at full stretch in the sixth game to give his fans hope. Alcaraz finally broke in the 10th game as Rod Laver Arena shook, before sealing an epic win in the first five-set match on centre court this year. On just how he found a way to win, Alcaraz said: “Believing all the time. “I always say that you have to believe in yourself no matter what you’re struggling, no matter anything. I was struggling in the middle of the third set. Physically, it was one of the most demanding matches that I have ever played in my short career. “But I’ve been in these kind of situations, in these kind matches, so I knew what I had to do. I had to put my heart into the match. I did it, I fought until the last ball. Extremely proud about myself, about the way that I fought and came back during the fifth set. “I’m just really happy to have the chance to play my first final in Melbourne. It was something I was chasing a lot.”

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Aussie Open: Sinner Sets Up Djokovic Semi-final Blockbuster

Reigning champion Jannik Sinner called Novak Djokovic “an inspiration” after setting up an Australian Open semi-final blockbuster against the 24-time Grand Slam winner. Italian second seed Sinner swatted aside big-serving American Ben Shelton 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 and has dropped only one set in moving ominously into the last four. The other semi-final at Melbourne Park is between world number one Carlos Alcaraz and third-ranked Alexander Zverev. “We all know what a challenge I am up to,” the relentless Sinner, who is chasing a third Australian title in a row, said of facing Djokovic, 38. “These are the moments you practise for and wake up for in the morning. “It improves you as a player and a person, we are lucky to have Novak still here playing incredible tennis for his age.” Sinner has a 6-4 win-loss record over the Serb, but has won their last five encounters. Djokovic, a record 10-time winner in Melbourne, took his place in the semi-finals when Italian opponent Lorenzo Musetti retired hurt when he was leading the Serb 6-4, 6-3, 1-3. Sinner, who has now reached a sixth consecutive Grand Slam semi-final, said that Djokovic still set the standard for professionalism. “Me, as a 24-year-old, I’m lucky to have someone like him in front of my eyes, and I can hopefully learn something,” said Sinner, who together with Alcaraz has dominated the last eight majors. “He’s an inspiration for all of us and especially the young players,” he added. Sinner and Shelton came into the quarter-final with the Italian having won eight of their nine previous meetings in straight sets. Eighth-seeded Shelton has got the better of Sinner just once, in their first encounter, in 2023. Sinner’s dominance includes winning their Melbourne semi-final 12 months ago, and it was to be more of the same on a cool evening on Rod Laver Arena. Sinner raced into a 4-1 lead in the first set as he sent Shelton, who is a year younger at 23, scurrying to all corners of the court. A Sinner ace sealed the first set in 49 minutes and, despite having the crowd willing him on, Shelton was broken again in falling two sets down. Four-time major champion Sinner was imperious and looked unflustered on the few occasions that the aggressive Shelton put him under the cosh. They went with serve in the third set and Shelton did his best to feed off what he has approvingly called a “rowdy” Melbourne crowd. But he struck his 33rd unforced error to give Sinner three break points, and after saving one of them, the American double-faulted to gift his opponent a 5-4 lead and signal the end was close. “We go day by day, today I felt I was moving again a little bit better, I feel physically stronger again,” Sinner said.

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