Carlos Alcaraz Rafa Nadal Ugo Humbert Emil Ruusuvuori France Spain Buenos Aires Madrid India tennis Barcelona Carlos Alcaraz Rafa Nadal Ugo Humbert Emil Ruusuvuori France Spain Buenos Aires Madrid India

Alcaraz embracing the expectations at Madrid Open

channelnewsasia.com

Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz rode home support to the Barcelona title on Sunday and knows fans will accept nothing less than victory at this week's Madrid Open but the world number two says he is happy to shoulder the expectations of his compatriots.The 19-year-old, who also won at Buenos Aires and Indian Wells this season and is keen to put another marker down on clay ahead of the French Open next month, says he thrives on the atmosphere of the home crowds in the Spanish capital."I don't take it as pressure, actually the complete opposite.

For me it's motivation," Alcaraz said on Tuesday. "It's a pleasure to see so many people, I like playing in front of such big crowds, and even more so in Spain.

It's a really big motivation."Alcaraz will aim to become only the second player after Rafa Nadal to successfully defend the title in Madrid, but failure to do so will not bring him down."Every tournament we go to, we think we can win it and we're going to try and win it.

But if we don't, it's not a failure for me," Alcaraz said."Leaving a tournament thinking I have failed would have more to do with the level of my tennis or my attitude, that's the most important thing for me.

Related News
The 20-year-old Spaniard had come into the tournament on the back of wins in Barcelona and Madrid but was outplayed by Marozsan, who is ranked 135th in the world.
Novak Djokovic says Carlos Alcaraz is «the player to beat» on clay ahead of his return to competitive action at the Italian Open. The 35-year-old is making his comeback to the ATP Tour after struggling with an elbow injury during the clay court season. Ad He did not compete at the Madrid Open last week after struggling physically at the Monte Carlo Masters and Banja Luka.
Fox News Flash top sports headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.
Madrid Open organisers apologised Thursday after not allowing the women's doubles finalists to make speeches after the match at the tournament last week, amid allegations of sexism. The mens' doubles finalists were allowed to speak to the crowd after their matches. Victoria Azarenka and Beatriz Haddad Maia beat Jessica Pegula and Coco Gauff in the women's final on Sunday but were not given a microphone to let them address the crowd.
Fox News Flash top sports headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.