Carlos Alcaraz survives match point to progress in French Open marathon match
The Spaniard’s fine form deserted him early on but he showed remarkable poise and fight to earn a comeback win
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Your support makes all the difference.Sixth seed Carlos Alcaraz clawed back from the brink of a shock second-round defeat at the French Open on Wednesday to outlast fellow Spaniard Albert Ramos-Vinolas in a five-set marathon that fully tested his title credentials.
The 19-year-old, who has taken the tennis world by storm this year, survived a match point in the fourth set before working his way back to win 6-1 6-7(7) 5-7 7-6(2) 6-4 in a match lasting over four hours and a half hours.
Alcaraz is now unbeaten in 12 straight matches after bagging back-to-back titles in Barcelona and Madrid going into Roland Garros.
“I feel tired but I mean it was a great battle against a great player,” he said. “I knew it would be a top match. We fought until the last point. I am so happy with the performance today.
“I had my chances if I saved that match point. The tiebreak I was aggressive. In the fifth set I was fresh. I was like the beginning of the match. That matchpoint changed everything.”
Alcaraz, who has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the past 12 months, had looked unflustered by the blustery conditions on the Simonne-Mathieu Court with a near flawless performance in the first set.
The 34-year-old Ramos-Vinolas, a clay court specialist and quarter-finalist in Paris six years ago, had no response to Alcaraz‘s explosive power and accuracy.
The teenager’s serve proved equally devastating as he gave away just three points in his service games in the first set.
His veteran opponent, however, was far from done, putting up a stronger fight as unforced errors started creeping into Alcaraz‘s game, including a forehand that sailed wide on Ramos-Vinolas’s set point.
With his opponent now clearly unsettled, having lost his earlier momentum and composure, Ramos-Vinolas moved Alcaraz around and broke him to go 2-1 up in the third set.
Alcaraz was paying the price for his unforced errors and his 44th, a simple volley into the net, handed Ramos-Vinolas a break to go 6-5 up and he held serve to lead 2-1.
Facing the prospect of a shock exit, Alcaraz survived a match point at 5-4 before forcing a fifth set.
He again had to work his way back from 0-3 to level before finishing Ramos-Vinolas off with an ace on his first match point.
Reuters
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