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Alcaraz turns to clay after Miami beatdown

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Carlos Alcaraz will be pleased to see the back of a disappointing North American hardcourt swing after a 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 loss in his opening match at the Miami Masters to David Goffin.

The Spaniard who would be expected to thrive in the Latin tennis hotbed, was unable to escape his opening match as the world No. 3 went down to his veteran Belgian opponent.

The 2022 champion could not capitalise on his early lead as he went down in Goffin’s comeback charge.

While he will stay third in the world behind Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev, Alcaraz heads to the more welcoming clay of Barcelona next month with confidence dented, earning just one title (Rotterdam) and one semi-final (Indian Wells, loss to Jack Draper) so far this season.

The 34-year-old Goffin gave away 13 years to Alcaraz in their second-round matchup as he doubled down on his upset of the youngster three years ago in Astana.

“Sometimes some matches are tough and you have to fight, like the first round, and you’re happy to have a second round like that in a stadium,” the winner said.

“That’s why I continue to play tennis, to have that kind of match in a stadium, to play some good tennis.

“Physically I was ready to fight and I was feeling the ball really well. It’s the kind of night that you feel great and you’re happy to fight, you enjoy every point,” he said.

Alcaraz suffered his first loss this season to an opponent ranked outside the top 30.

Goffin broke early in all three sets in his turnaround effort under the Florida lights and was helped by 43 unforced errors from former No. 1 Alcaraz.

Alcaraz was left with no excuse in defeat.

“It was a poor level from me, I just wanted to play better. After the first set, I thought I was going to be better. 

“He played good tennis and my level didn’t increase.”

He added: “Physically I did not feel well in my legs. When you don’t have the confidence of your level physically, I think it’s really tough to maintain good tennis.

“But I wasn’t injured, I wasn’t sick. I was feeling perfectly before the match. I was a bit nervous, but nothing more than that.”

Main photo:- David Goffincelebrates shock win in Miami – by Pete Staples/ATPTour.com

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Alcaraz masters tough conditions for third Barca final

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Carlos Alcaraz booked his third straight final at the Barcelona Open on a windy Saturday, repeating his win from last week over Arthur Fils.

The Spanish top seed advanced 6-2, 6-4 into Sunday’s title match, where he takes on Holger Rune for the first time on clay.

Rune, a 6-3, 6-2 winner over Karen Khachanov, stands 1-2 against Alcraz on the Tour, with the pair meeting 20 times (10-10) in juniors.

In Monte Carlo eight days ago, Alcaraz needed to come from a set down to beat Fils on his way to the title.

The Barcelona meeting was less dramatic for the local world No. 2, owns titles here from 2022 and 2023 (he was injured and did not play in 2024). He has now won his last 14 Barcelona matches.

Alcaraz was helped in the first set as Fils twice lost serve on double-faults, The French challenger lifted in the second set but was still unable to break through.

He drew a code violation for ball abuse after losing ser to trail 2-1 but saved two match points before Alcaraz clinched victory in 76 minutes.

Alcaraz won his ninth straight clay match, with Fils striking a massive 38 unforced errors.

“I’m just glad it was sunny, even if the wind was really tough to deal with,” Alcaraz said. “He was playing fantastic tennis,

“I had to do what I had to do – and I did it pretty well. I focused on my game and hitting the right shot. I’m happy I was able to do that.

“To be in this final again means a lot. I used to watch the Barcelona finals on TV as a little kid. Let’s see if I can end with the trophy tomorrow in front of my people.”

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Rune puts on masterclass to crush Khachanov

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Holger Rune will return to the ATP live ranking top 10 after a near-flawless 6-3, 6-2 display against Karen Khachanov on Saturday which sends the Dane into the final of the Barcelona Open.  

Rune needed just 67 minutes to completely dominate in the semi-final on a court named in honour of Rafael Nadal, holding his opponent to just five winners for the match – and only one in the second set.

The No. 13 Scandinavian,  by contrast, produced 21 winners and profitted from superb drop shots to ensure the win.

Khachanov was leading 3-2 in the opening set when Rune erupted.

“I was playing very good from the back of the court and mixing up the pace,” the winner said. I played most of the match the right way.

“I was aggressive and hitting through my shots. Rising in the ranking is a motivation, but I was treating this like a training week, trying to get better every day.

“Now it’s becoming more than a training week and I’m happy to be in another final (after Indian Wells in March. I’m happy with how I handled things today.”

Rune will play top seed Carlos Alcaraz in Sunday’s final.

Main photo:- Holger Rune winning in Barcelona – by ATPTour.com

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Tsitsipas quits Barca match with illness

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Arthur Fils spent just 20 minutes on court before advancing to the semi-finals in Barcelona on Friday as opponent Stefanos Tsitsipas quit their quarter-final with apparent illness.

The rising Frenchman collected a 2-0 win as the four-time runner-up walked to the net midway through the third game, unable to continue.

Fills will take on two-time champion Carlos Alcaraz for a place in the title match.

The pair played only last week in Monte Carlos, with Alcaraz posting a comeback quarter-final win.

“I think Stef has a bug, but I’m not sure,” Fils said. “I was ready to battle for a few hours, we always have tough matches.

“I hope he will be ready for the next weeks and Roland Garros.”

The No. 14 said he is pleased with the state of his own game: “I’m playing great, the match in Monte Carlo against Carlitos was positive even if I lost.”

Main photo; Arthus Fils in action -by ISF Ltd

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