Home » Slumped, broken and beaten: The age of Djokovic is ending

Slumped, broken and beaten: The age of Djokovic is ending

Slumped, broken and beaten: The age of Djokovic is ending

Novak Djokovic just witnessed the future of tennis.

It’s younger, better, faster, stronger.

And it’s personified in the form of 21-year-old Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz.

If the 2023 Wimbledon men’s singles final was the breakout moment for the Spaniard, when he broke Djokovic mentally in a five-set epic, then the 2024 rematch was the moment he solidified himself as the future of the sport.

The final was not fitting of the moment. It was a 6-2, 6-2, 7-6 (7/4) rout.

It was the type of hammering Djokovic has rarely received. And certainly not in more recent years.

For Alcaraz, though, it was something else.

A coronation.

Carlos Alcaraz’s second Wimbledon title, likely will not be his last.(Anadolu: stringer)

He now has four slam titles on all surfaces at the age of 21, as he became the youngest male to win the French Open and Wimbledon in the same year.

He also has never lost a grand slam final.

At the same age, Djokovic had one slam title, Roger Federer zero and Rafael Nadal three.

Alcaraz has paced them all.

And while the dirt is barely covering the grave of Nadal’s career, this super Spaniard lays siege to a future where right now he has no equal.

Alcaraz is totally fearless

Never was that more apparent than in this Wimbledon final.

From the start, it was Djokovic who was in unfamiliar territory and on the back foot.

It wasn’t even from the opening service game, it was from the coin toss.

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