22 January,2024 07:50 AM IST | Melbourne | AFP
Carlos Alcaraz celebrates a point against Miomir Kecmanovic in Melbourne yesterday. Pic/Getty Images
Carlos Alcaraz said he would have to play at his "best level" in his Australian Open quarter-final with Alexander Zverev after producing a masterclass against unseeded Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic on Monday.
Straight set win
The second seed - seen as the biggest threat to defending champion Novak Djokovic - did not face a single break point in a dominant performance, rolling over his opponent 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 in one hour 49 minutes. The Spaniard, who chose not to play any competitive tennis in the build-up to the first Grand Slam of the year, said he "did everything perfectly" at Rod Laver Arena.
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Alexander Zverev returns to Cameron Norrie during their pre-quarterfinal yesterday. Pic/AFP
But admitted he would have to find another gear against sixth seed Zverev, who won their most recent meeting at the ATP Finals to lead their head-to-head 4-3. "He is a really great player," said the 20-year-old. "He has beaten great guys here in this tournament. Obviously, I love playing against him. It's always tough battles. I have to play my best level. He pushes me to play 100 per cent every time. "The last time we faced each other, I lost so I have to be focused on that. I have to improve my level from that match."
Zverev, who beat British 19th seed Cameron Norrie to progress, lost to Alcaraz in the quarter-finals of last year's US Open, but he played down the parallels and said he had fuel in the tank, predicting a "very fun, entertaining match". "I'm tired, for sure, because I played 7-6 in the fifth set again two times out of the last three matches, but I'm not dead," said the 26-year-old German. "I'm not completely exhausted. I'm not in the same physical state I was in the US Open. I expect it to be very different, to be honest," the World No. 6 added.
First time in last 16
Alcaraz, making his first appearance in the last 16 at Melbourne Park, was quickly into his stride, breaking in the third game. The third set became a procession as the Spaniard stepped up a gear - a deft drop shot set up match point and a thunderous serve sealed the deal.
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