Carlos Alcaraz retains title in Madrid

It took everything for Carlos Alcaraz to defend his title in Madrid on Sunday against qualifier Jan-Lennard Struff. In front of his family, however, the Spaniard found a way to shine and confirm his supremacy on clay just before Roland-Garros, winning in three sets of 6-4, 3-6 and 6-3.



On paper, this final was uneven. On the one hand, the best player in the world on clay, with 18 wins in 19 matches on this surface this season and winner two weeks ago in Barcelona. On the other, the 65e world racket, a 33-year-old driver with no victory to his name and drafted from the qualifications.


PHOTO THOMAS COEX, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Carlos Alcaraz and his trophy

However, Struff gave a hard time to the young prodigy of Palmar. Well aware of the talent gap between his opponent and him, the German had only one idea in mind: to be the aggressor. And he used this strategy extensively during the 144 minutes of this final.

The 6-foot-4 player took to the net 52 times during the game. Whether in a serve-volley sequence or to finish the exchange after pushing Alcaraz to its last entrenchments in the back of the field.

The Spaniard had to adjust quickly early in the game as Struff hammered him mercilessly. Suddenly, the gap between the two melted like a vanilla cone in the middle of a heat wave.

Even lobs and passing shots weren’t going anywhere.

Even in the first set, the favorite was fragile in the service. He had given himself a slight cushion by breaking Struff in the first game of the match. However, his first service game lasted nearly nine minutes, he was broken on his next game, and the third needed a tie. Returns of service from his rival, well planted on the baseline, were smoking.

Alcaraz will however have had his opponent worn out. He saved three break points to slip away with the first set. Even if the second escaped him, the Spaniard remained combative. His mobility and ball touch, as usual, will have annoyed his opponent. The new king of clay may have had a harder time defending his second title in three weeks, but he got there thanks in part to the support of the crowd. The Spanish flags made up the bleachers. In the fourth game of the third end, the local hero asked for the support of the crowd. This break, to make it 3-1, will have made the difference.

Acclaimed and relieved, he finished the tournament lying on his back, like an angel in the sand, with the feeling of accomplishment.


PHOTO PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU, FRANCE-PRESSE AGENCY

Carlos Alcaraz

Struff: the surprise

Injured in a foot last year, Struff had started the season beyond the 150e world rank.

He was therefore obliged to go through the qualifications to hope to be part of the main draws. His journey to Madrid came to an abrupt halt against Aslan Karatsev in qualifying, but he ended up being drafted as the “lucky loser”.


PHOTO THOMAS COEX, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Jan Lennard Struff

Brilliantly, by beating Stéfanos Tsitsipás in the quarterfinals and taking his revenge against Karatsev in the semifinals, he was able to play his second career final.

This match against Alcaraz was his ninth of the tournament. Despite the defeat, he has nothing to reproach himself for. Thanks to his performance on Spanish soil, he will point to 28e world ranking, this Monday.

His strategy paid off in the first two thirds of the game. He shook Alcaraz, enough to make him doubt, frustrate and even take off a sleeve. Rarely is the world number two attacked in this way.

To win, it would have been necessary to be more efficient in the service. Alcaraz is certainly the best returner on the circuit, but Struff did not put any luck on his side. In the first set, he hit just 40% of his first serves, giving his opponent a ton of second serves. He climbed to 51% at the end of the match, but it’s too little against an opponent of this caliber.

The following

Alcaraz defended his title in Barcelona. He just did the same in Madrid. With Rafael Nadal not having played a single match on clay this season, for the first time in his career, the one who celebrated his 20th birthday on Friday is by far the favorite to take top honors at Roland-Garros. He is alone in the world on clay.

It will be interesting to see what happens in Rome next week. Novak Djokovic, defending champion, will have a lot of points to defend. Especially since Alcaraz is blowing his neck just five points behind him and the world leader.


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