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Welcome to the Carlos Alcaraz Era: A thrilling Wimbledon victory proved tennis' newest star has officially ended The Big 3's domination

Jul 17, 2023, 22:19 IST
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Carlos Alcaraz listens to the crowd roar for him during Wimbledon final.Visionhaus/Getty Images
  • Carlos Alcaraz defeated Novak Djokovic in five thrilling sets to win Wimbledon for the first time.
  • It was the first clear sign that the torch has been passed in men's tennis.
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Welcome to The Carlos Alcaraz Era.

We all knew The Big 3 Era of men's tennis was nearing the end, but few could have predicted that it would have been so symbolically sent out to pasture on Wimbledon's grass court. In front of royalty and a TV audience of millions, Alcaraz defeated the youngest of tennis' Big 3 — Novak Djokovic — on Sunday in a thrilling five-set match.

Alcaraz, whom many assumed would be a clay-court specialist early in his career like fellow countryman and Big 3 member Rafael Nadal, has now won two majors — one on grass and one on a hard court at last year's US Open. and perhaps the eyebrow raising part of Sunday's win was the fact that the 20-year-old Spaniard bested Djokovic at the elder player's own game. Alcaraz won with speed, clever shots in the biggest moments, and an unbreakable endurance in a 5-hour match on the biggest stage.

Novak Djokovic slips and falls to the ground during Wimbledon final loss to Carlos Alcaraz.Visionhaus/Getty Images

Does this mean we have entered a new era of men's tennis? Consider the following:

Djoker is not going anywhere yet and probably has some Grand Slams still to win. But even he seemed surprised by how quickly Alcaraz became an all-around-great player, repeatedly using the term "amazing" to describe the performance.

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Carlos Alcaraz yells during his win over Novak Djokovic at Wimbledon.Patrick Smith/Getty Images

"I thought I would have trouble with you only on clay, and maybe hard court, but not on grass," Djokovic told Alcaraz after the match. "But now, it's a different story from this year, obviously. Congrats. Amazing. Way to adapt to the surface."

Now that The Big 3 era is dead and Alcaraz has arrived, the only thing left is whether anybody else will step up and join him for the next 15 years.

Until then, let's hope we just get a few more Alcaraz-Djokovic finals.

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