The Wimbledon central public adores Carlos Alcaraz. The amazing nature of the Murcian’s game and his youthful freshness are well received in the ‘Cathedral’ of world tennis.
They supported their current champion when he suffered from the nerves and difficulties of a Daniel Medvedev very solid in the first set. They helped him get back by cheering on the Alcaraz show, which when released always leaves memorable points, the kind collected in television summaries, that spread like wildfire on social networks.
Alcaraz will enter Sunday’s final at 3 p.m., her second consecutive Wimbledon and Grand Slam. The Serbian will also face the Roland Garros champion Novak Djokovic or Italian Lorenzo Musetti.
He won 6-7 (1-7), 6-3, 6-4 and 6-4 in 2h.55′. “It was difficult for me to control my nerves and Medvedev played great tennis in the first set. From 3-1 in the second I was able to play my game and was more satisfied,” Alcaraz said in the court interview.
All the fans in the middle can hear it. “Overall I played a good game,” he said in a routine speech.
But that all changed when Alcaraz commented that Sunday “will be a good day for the Spanish.” He had to shut up, boos took the stage. The English attacked the Spanish.
The final of the Euro Cup is Spain-England. Alcaraz held up his hands in a sign of forgiveness and warned, when he could speak again, that “I didn’t say Spain would win, I just said it would be a happy day.” He said this between smiles, sweetening the audience’s visceral response, embracing the nuance with laughter. His technical team and family also laughed, because Carlos is used to turning the situation around. He got out of trouble.
Alcaraz left to a standing ovation, like a champion, although he almost lost his joy in football. The interviewer is good at reducing tension with a golf question, about how good he is at it. “I’m very, very bad compared to my tennis, but it helps me get my head off tennis.”
Source: La Verdad

I’m Robert Maynard, and I am a passionate journalist with experience in sports writing. For the last few years, I have been writing for Today Times Live. My main focus has been on sports-related stories and features. With my strong background in journalism and extensive knowledge of the industry, I am able to provide readers with well-crafted pieces that are both informative and engaging.