Carlos Alcaraz reaches US Open quarters without dropping set - ESPN
NEW YORK — Carlos Alcaraz hit a behind-the-back shot at the US Open to win a point in a 7-6 (3), 6-3, 6-4 victory over Arthur Rinderknech on Sunday that made the Spaniard the youngest man in the Open era to reach 13 Grand Slam quarterfinals.
«Sometimes, I practice it. I'm not going to lie,» the No. 2-seeded Alcaraz said about the bit of wizardry he delivered in the first set. «But I mean, I don't practice it, like, too many times. Just in practice, if the opportunity is there, I will try. In the match, it's kind of the same. If I have the opportunity, why not?»
At 22 years and 3 months old, Alcaraz is about 6 months younger than Boris Becker was when he got to major quarterfinal No. 13.
Alcaraz's opponent on Tuesday will be No. 20 Jiri Lehecka, a 23-year-old from the Czech Republic. Lehecka advanced to his second Slam quarterfinal with a 7-6 (4), 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 win over Adrian Mannarino.
Alcaraz and Lehecka have played three times, with Alcaraz holding a 2-1 advantage. They have never met in a major.
«He's one of the two biggest challenges right now in tennis,» Lehecka said. «He's moving very well. He can serve big. He knows everything. His game is complete.… So for me I will just try to stick to the weapons that I have, to the weapons which worked for me in these last two matchups.»
Early on against Rinderknech, a Frenchman who played college tennis at Texas A&M, Alcaraz closed a love hold that made the score 2-all in spectacular fashion. Moving to his right at midcourt, Alcaraz found himself in what appeared to be a bad spot when Rinderknech wrong-footed him.
But Alcaraz wrapped his racket around his body and flicked a shot up the line.
Perhaps startled that the point wasn't over, Rinderknech hit a volley that landed in