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Alcaraz shatters records to reach AO quarters

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Carlos Alcaraz completed his Grand Slam full deck by reaching his maiden Australian Open quarter final.

The Spaniard also became the youngest Open Era player to reach the 4th round in seven consecutive editions of a Slam.

The No. 2 seed easily beat Miomir Kecmanovic 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 in under two hours on Rod Laver Arena.

The 20-year-old reigning Wimbledon champion missed the season opener here in 2023 because of injury but is rapidly making up for lost time in 2024.

The trickiest moment of Alcaraz’s  evening came during the post match on court interview with Jim Courier.

When asked if he any watched the other matches on TV, Carlos rattled off  all his favourite ATP players.

Courier then asked, “and the WTA?”  The Spaniard seemed lost for words, and Courier concluded the interview to spare his blushes.

Alcaraz dropped just one set on his way to the last eight.

At just 20 years of age that record previously belonged to Bjorn Borg who achieved this feat between the French Open in 1975 and Wimbledon 1977 when the Swede was 21 years old.

“I don’t give it importance, the records I want to aspire to are Novak’s, I aim for those throughout my career,” Alcaraz said after his match.

With Daniil Medvedev, Alexander Zverev and Carlos Alcaraz all progressing  this year’s AO is the first time in the Open Era where all of the top six seeds have reached the men’s singles quarter final at this event.

Alacaraz added “I’m improving day by day and even with the movements I’m making things better. I’m getting used to these courts and I hope I can still improve.

Goals? My goal is to maintain a high level throughout the season. After Wimbledon I lost matches that I shouldn’t have lost but this is tennis, these things happen. Now my goal is to do as well as last year and correct the things I did wrong.

Kecmanovic has come back from very tough matches and this is certainly better for me. Two years ago we faced each other in Miami and he played a great match, I have to play my best tennis to advance to the next round,”

His quarter final opponent Alexander Zverev is there for the third time, surviving five set marathons on the way, including a four-hour, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (3) fourth-round victory over Brit Cameron Norrie.

So focussed was Zverev on his match preparation, the post-match interviewer reminded him that “today is your dad’s birthday”

Clearly embarrassed as his dad was watching from his player box, he joined in with the crowd to sing “happy birthday!”

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Ruud survives a scare to secure Gstaad quarters

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Two-time champion Casper Ruud had to work for more than two and a  half hours to overcome Jaime Faria, the Portuguese who put out Stan Wawrinka in the first round at the Gstaad Swiss Open on Thursday.

Faria was riding the momentum from Tuesday’s defeat of three-time Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka, set to retire this season and beaten in an opening match at his home venue.

Faria had his eye on a second upset as he faced Ruud, who lifted the trophy at this elite alpine village in 2021 and 2022. 

Ruud  ahd to dodge a bullet and mount a comeback to get through the second-round test against the Portuguese.

After dropping the opening set in a tiebreaker, Ruud played patiently as Faria saved five break points in the sixth game of the second set before failing on the sixth.

Ruud then pulled away for a 6-7 (1), 6-4, 6-2 victory, his first since Roland Garros.

“Sometimes it is hard to say when you get a good feeling and you start to win some games in a row,” the winner said.

“You try from the first game to the last, but suddenly something clicked in the middle of the second for me, luckily.”

He added: “I had to really fight hard and if I played one bad game in the second and he serves well, it could be over and it would be time to go home. But luckily I can extend the stay.”

The Scandinavian could join Spaniards Sergi Bruguera and Alex Corretja as three-time winners in the Alps, with Ruud now standing 10-1 here over his career.

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Tsitsipas finishes off Kym after overnight pause

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Stefanost Tsitsipas said he slept soundly prior to finishing off a darkness-interrupted match on Thursday as he eliminated local Jerome Kym at the Gstaad Swiss Open.

The Greek who once cracked third in the world and the 186th-ranked Swiss returned to the clay after darkness on Wednesday night left them hanging at 5-all in the third set.

Tsitsipas revved up his game from the resumption to emerge into the quarter-finals 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (5).

The second seed now standing 85th in the world after several poor seasons and a split with his father as his coach, said getting his rest was not a problem after the interruption.

“It was strange going to bed and not being finished. I visualised what I wanted to do, my shot patterns.

“It worked out pretty well. 

“I had a good night’s sleep, I was not too stressed and I recovered to get ready for the continuation.”

After saving break points in the first game on Thursday, Tsitsipas triumphed in the final-set tiebreaker 

“I’m relieved I was able to save a couple of break points.. I put my game together and made it )victory) happen again.”

The Greek now faces off against Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech for a semi-final spot.

“I’m expecting a lot of big serves, the altitude (1050m) helps. I’ll try to build consistency around my own serve.”

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Darkness reprieve for fading Tsitsipas in Gstaad

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Stefanos Tsitsipas was handed a reprieve due to fading light with his second round match at the Swiss Open Gstaad stopped with the Greek deadlocked with local Jerome Kym 6-4, 6-7 (2), 5-5.

The math had to be halted as night fell and electronic linecalling computers could not read the path of the ball on the clay in contrast to humans who could have carried on for a few additional minutes..

The 27-year-old Tsitsipas was taking the worst of it in the concluding stage after a promising start.against a journeyman opponent ranked 186.

Tsitsipas, his ranking down to 85th after once standing third in the world, lashed out verbally in the last few games, apparently frustrated with his racquet reactions.

The Greek was quick to make his point of an overnight stoppage to the chair umpire while Kym – who reached 5-all with a love service hold – left the court with a defiant fist pump for his public in this alpine resort village.

The cutoff came after just over two hours of play, with the contest to be concluded on Thursday. The winner reaches the Friday quarter-finals.

Tsitsipas produced his last notable result in April with a fourth-round showing at the Madrid Masters,

He is aiming for his second quarter-final of the season after Doha in February and his 2025 Barcelona 15 months ago.

Tsitsipas stands 10-1 vs. players ranked outside the top 100 this season with a sole loss to No. 104 Italian Matteo Arnaldi at the Roland Garros second round.

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