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Wimbledon 2024 Final | Magical Alcaraz leaves Djokovic spellbound

Storm Sanders was Australia’s hero after she won the first singles rubber before returning for the deciding doubles match alongside 38-year-old Samantha Stosur.

King Carlos: Alcaraz ruled the day with a dazzling display, hardly putting a foot wrong and overpowering Djokovic in straight sets.
| Photo Credit: AP

Lightning never strikes twice. Definitely not in Novak Djokovic’s tennis career one would think. But it did on Centre Court on Sunday as Carlos Alcaraz played celestial tennis to vanquish the Serb 6-2, 6-2, 7-6(4) for a second straight time in the Wimbledon final.

The 10 games Djokovic won were slightly better than the seven he managed against Rafael Nadal in the 2020 French Open, his worst in Major finals. But it was a beat-down like no other as Alcaraz reduced him to a relic by handing him his first straight sets defeat in a completed match at SW19 since the 2013 final versus Andy Murray.

Short of breath

Just over five weeks ago, Djokovic had had a surgery to repair a torn meniscus. Though he did not appear in any physical discomfort, he was often short of breath. It would, however, be a disservice to Alcaraz’s excellence to cite the injury, for the 21-year-old played one of the matches of his life to secure his fourth Grand Slam title and complete the coveted French Open-Wimbledon double.

“I am not going to consider myself a great champion yet,” Alcaraz declared. “Not like them,” he said, pointing to Djokovic. The evidence, though, was to the contrary.

The only time Djokovic’s tennis matched Alcaraz’s was in the 13-minute opening game that had seven deuces and finished with an Alcaraz break of serve. For the rest of the contest, the 37-year-old 24-time Slam winner looked like an aged novelist lost for words.

Alcaraz won the first 6-2, showing none of the nerves he had in last year’s final when he lost it 1-6. The serves were big and pin-point, the ground-strokes powerful and sharply angled, and his favourite drop shot was encrypted in plain sight.

The forehand was especially mesmerising, for it was so accurate that it seemed like Alcaraz was controlling it with a string. The Spaniard’s blindingly brilliant athleticism, which got him to many a ball that was on the verge of being swallowed by the court, left Djokovic exasperated.

The second set played out similarly, just that the early break came rather easily, helped by two high-quality blocked returns from Alcaraz and a Djokovic volley gone awry. The missed volley was a recurring theme for the Serb, completely undoing his ploy to play the net-rushing style. “He wasn’t allowing me free points on my serve,” Djokovic said. “He…

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