Carlos Alcaraz defeats seven-time Wimbledon champ Novak Djokovic to win 1st Wimbledon title

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In a brilliant, gutsy performance in the Wimbledon final on Sunday, world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz captured his second Grand Slam title in less than a year, defeating seven-time Wimbledon champ Novak Djokovic 6-1, 7-6 (6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 and ending the 36-year-old Serbian’s quest for the calendar Grand Slam in 2023.

“It’s more special to play a final against a legend from our sport,” Alcaraz said ahead of the match. “If you want to be the best, you have to beat the best.”

Playing in only his fourth tournament on grass, the 20-year-old Spaniard has proven a quick study on the surface. In two previous appearances at the All England Club, Alcaraz had finished no better than the fourth round. He displayed marked improvement last year, but nothing about his performance signaled he would lift the Gentlemen’s Singles Trophy one year later or have the game — or gumption — to beat one of the all-time great grass players on Centre Court.

Novak Djokovic VS Carlos Alcaraz Wimbledon final | 2nd set Tiebreak

Before the second set Sunday, Djokovic’s serve had been broken only three times in 103 games this fortnight. Alcaraz Alcaraz did better than that in three sets, storming back from a disastrous opening hour of tennis. Djokovic was clinical in the first set. He dismantled Alcaraz’s forehand and rushed him into errors. Alcaraz won only his final service game that set, but he came alive on every point, as if the game were suddenly coming into focus.

After trading breaks with Djokovic in the second set, he faced him in a tiebreak. At Wimbledon. Down a set. In the final. On Centre Court. And became the first person to beat the 23-time Grand Slam champ in a tiebreak since Rafael Nadal in the quarters of last year’s French Open. After clinching the 85-minute second set, he lifted his racket to the sky, enticing the Wimbledon crowd to enjoy the moment with him.

“Carlos! Carlos! Carlos!” they chanted in response. If there is a 12th man in football and a sixth man in basketball, the second man at Centre Court helped to shift the momentum Alcaraz’s way. He won the next two sets 6-1 but lost focus and the next set 6-3, forcing a fifth. Then, in a sensational display of grit, endurance and newfound nerves of steel, he broke Djokovic’s serve in the third game and eventually toppled the Wimbledon great.

“Playing a final in Wimbledon is something that I dreamed about when I started playing tennis,” Alcaraz said Friday. “It’s going to be a really emotional moment for me. For Novak, it’s one more day, one more moment. For me, it’s going to be the best moment of my life.”

Alcaraz said many times this fortnight that he believed he could beat Djokovic in the final. But there’s a vast divide between believing and doing. What Alcaraz accomplished on Sunday — in a changing-of-the-guard moment that’s being compared to Roger Federer’s 2001 upset of Pete Sampras here in the fourth round — is difficult to overstate. Djokovic hadn’t lost a match here since 2017. He is a seven-time Wimbledon champion and already won the first two majors of this year.

“Every time I step on Centre Court, it’s unlike any other feeling in sport,” Djokovic said earlier this week.

Djokovic was also on track to add a rare accomplishment: a calendar Grand Slam. That a player with 17 games of grass-court experience ended his hope of holding all four major titles within the same calendar year is remarkable. That Alcaraz simply outplayed Djokovic on the court where he built his dynasty is legend-making. With his win, Alcaraz becomes the second-youngest player to beat Djokovic in a major. The youngest? Alcaraz’s compatriot, Nadal, in the 2006 French Open quarterfinals.