Australian Open, Alcaraz
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New serve takes Carlos Alcaraz far at the Australian Open. The Spaniard’s new motion has caught attention for its striking resemblance to Novak Djokovic’s.
Alcaraz has now reached 14 grand slam quarter-finals, setting a new record for a man aged 23 or under, surpassing Bjorn Borg and Boris Becker's tally of 13 each
Preview the the 2026 Australian Open match between Carlos Alcaraz vs. Alex de Minaur, plus betting odds, insights and head-to-head-stats.
Carlos Alcaraz remains unbeaten at the Australian Open, coming through another tough test to see off Tommy Paul and book his place in the quarter-finals. So far, Alcaraz hasn’t dropped a set through his first four matches,
Tien, 20, routs Daniil Medvedev to become the youngest American man to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal since Andy Roddick at the 2002 U.S. Open. Top-ranked Carlos Alcaraz ousts Tommy Paul. Aryna
As the Spaniard joked, he has the contract that the Serb sent him, although he has yet to sign it. Jokes aside, Alcaraz's serve has been noticeably calmer in Melbourne, with the world's best player getting broken five times from 14 chances offered to his first four rivals.
The founder and CEO of Whoop, the company that makes the device, says it is “approved by the International Tennis Federation.”
The Spaniard is through to the quarter-finals and has tweaked his game. The former world No.1 has let him know he wants royalties.
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World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz caught using banned device before Aussie Open clash with Alex de Minaur
World No.1 Carlos Alcaraz was ordered to remove a banned fitness tracker before his Australian Open fourth-round match, sparking a rules debate ahead of his quarter-final against Alex de Minaur. The incident unfolded during the warm-up on Rod Laver Arena ...