Current:Home > FinanceUS Open favorite Alcaraz crashes out after a shocking straight-sets loss -BeyondProfit Compass
US Open favorite Alcaraz crashes out after a shocking straight-sets loss
View
Date:2025-04-13 14:03:43
NEW YORK (AP) — After double-faulting to fall behind two sets to none — a deficit he’s never overcome — in the second round of the U.S. Open on Thursday night, Carlos Alcaraz slung his equipment bag over a shoulder and trudged toward the locker room.
Glancing in the direction of his coach, 2003 French Open champion Juan Carlos Ferrero, Alcaraz pointed his right index finger at his temple, then wagged that finger, as if to say, “I’m not thinking straight.”
He might have been excused for being confused by what was transpiring under the closed retractable roof at Arthur Ashe Stadium on a chilly evening, and one set later, Alcaraz’s 15-match Grand Slam unbeaten streak was over with a sloppy 6-1, 7-5, 6-4 loss to 74th-ranked Botic van de Zandschulp.
“It was a fight against myself, in my mind, during the match. In tennis, you are playing against someone that wants the same as you — to win the match — and you have to be as ... calm as you can, just to think better in the match and try to do good things,” Alcaraz said. “Today I was playing against the opponent, and I was playing against myself, in my mind. A lot of emotions that I couldn’t control.”
The result eliminated the pre-tournament men’s favorite and certainly was hard to predict beforehand, given the No. 3-seeded Alcaraz’s standing in the game, his excellence of late and his opponent’s far-lesser resume.
It followed another exit in Ashe for a past U.S. Open champion, Naomi Osaka, who was sent home Thursday by Karolina Muchova 6-3, 7-6 (5). That one, though, was not nearly as out-of-nowhere as what happened to Alcaraz.
He won the French Open in June and Wimbledon in July to raise his career total to four major championships, including taking the title at Flushing Meadows in 2022. Then, in early August, Alcaraz won a silver medal at the Paris Olympics, losing to Novak Djokovic in the final.
Maybe, Alcaraz acknowledged, a tennis schedule he called “so tight” drained him too much.
“Probably, I came here with not as much energy as I thought that I was going to (have),” he said. “But, I mean, I don’t want to put that as excuse.”
What’s clear is he never found his footing against van de Zandschulp, a 28-year-old from the Netherlands. Alcaraz was way off, repeatedly missing the sorts of shots he usually makes routinely.
The 21-year-old from Spain came in with a 16-2 record at the U.S. Open, where he never lost before the quarterfinals in three previous appearances. This also was Alcaraz’s earliest defeat at any major tournament since bowing out in the second round of Wimbledon in 2021 as a teenager; he’s never been beaten in the first round at a Slam event.
In contrast, van de Zandschulp only once has been to a Grand Slam quarterfinal, getting that far at the U.S. Open in 2021.
Otherwise, though, he is not someone most folks would have expected to pull off this sort of monumental upset. Consider: van de Zandschulp was just 11-18 for the season at the start of this week and hadn’t won consecutive matches at a tour-level event in 2024 until now.
“Actually, I am a little bit at a loss for words,” he said. “It’s been an incredible evening for me.”
Sure was.
The key stat probably was that van de Zandschulp won the point on 28 of his 35 trips to the net.
The opening set was unbelievably lopsided. With van de Zandschulp’s powerful forehands and serves at up to 132 mph finding their marks, Alcaraz never seemed to get comfortable.
He did not produce a single winner in that set and was nearly doubled up in total points, 24-13. The second set was a bit better for him, but not enough so, and a double-fault gift-wrapped a service break that put van de Zandschulp up 6-5. When Alcaraz pushed a forehand wide to end the next game, van de Zandschulp finished off a hold at love that gave him the initial two sets after 1 1/2 hours of action.
Didn’t take long for Alcaraz to fall behind by a break in the third, too, at 3-2, but he made a stand immediately — well, with some help, because van de Zandschulp’s double-fault ceded a break that made it 3-all. Alcaraz then held at love and smiled as he strutted to the changeover.
That grin quickly was gone, though, because Alcaraz’s mistakes kept arriving, and van de Zandschulp never folded.
“Of course I had some nerves, but I think if you want to beat one of these guys, you have to keep your calm and keep your head there,” said van de Zandschulp, who will face No. 25 seed Jack Draper of Britain in the third round on Saturday. “Otherwise, they take advantage of it.”
___
AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis
veryGood! (32)
Related
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- AI companies agree to voluntary safeguards, Biden announces
- Ron DeSantis threatens Anheuser-Busch over Bud Light marketing campaign with Dylan Mulvaney
- Two mysterious bond market indicators
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- The job market is cooling as higher interest rates and a slowing economy take a toll
- SpaceX prepares to launch its mammoth rocket 'Starship'
- New Mexico Could Be the Fourth State to Add a Green Amendment to Its Constitution, But Time Is Short
- Small twin
- Al Jaffee, longtime 'Mad Magazine' cartoonist, dies at 102
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Black man who says he was elected mayor of Alabama town alleges that White leaders are keeping him from position
- The Current Rate of Ocean Warming Could Bring the Greatest Extinction of Sealife in 250 Million Years
- Taylor Swift, Keke Palmer, Austin Butler and More Invited to Join the Oscars’ Prestigious Academy
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Polaris Guitarist Ryan Siew Dead at 26
- A big misconception about debt — and how to tackle it
- Conservation has a Human Rights Problem. Can the New UN Biodiversity Plan Solve it?
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Gloomy global growth, Tupperware troubles, RIP HBO Max
UN Report Says Humanity Has Altered 70 Percent of the Earth’s Land, Putting the Planet on a ‘Crisis Footing’
Chipotle and Sweetgreen's short-lived beef over a chicken burrito bowl gets resolved
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
Jada Pinkett Smith Teases Possible Return of Red Table Talk After Meta Cancelation
An indicator that often points to recession could be giving a false signal this time
The job market is cooling as higher interest rates and a slowing economy take a toll