06/30/25 05:03:00
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06/30 17:02 CDT Wimbledon: 2-time defending champ Carlos Alcaraz needs 5 sets
to beat Fabio Fognini in the 1st round
Wimbledon: 2-time defending champ Carlos Alcaraz needs 5 sets to beat Fabio
Fognini in the 1st round
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Tennis Writer
LONDON (AP) --- Carlos Alcaraz, locked in a five-set struggle at Centre Court,
looked toward his coach Monday and shouted something about how Fabio Fognini
--- 38 years old, retiring after this season, winless in 2025 --- looked as if
he could keep playing until he's 50.
"I don't know why it's his last Wimbledon," Alcaraz said later, "because the
level he has shown, he can still play three or four more years. Unbelievable."
The two-time defending champion at the All England Club needed to go through
more than 4 1/2 hours of back-and-forth shifts against the much-older and
much-less-accomplished Fognini before emerging with a 7-5, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 2-6,
6-1 victory in the first round.
It wasn't supposed to be that tough.
"Didn't expect to play five sets against him," Fognini said. "I had my chance."
Consider, to begin with, that the No. 2-seeded Alcaraz is 22, already a
five-time Grand Slam champion, including his latest at the French Open three
weeks ago, and is currently on a career-best 19-match winning streak.
Consider, too, that Fognini has never been past the third round at the All
England Club in 15 appearances and reached the quarterfinals at any major
tournament just once --- way back at the 2011 French Open. He entered Monday
ranked 138th and 0-6 this year.
Oh, and then there's this: Only twice has the reigning men's champion at
Wimbledon been beaten in the first round the following year, Lleyton Hewitt in
2003 and Manuel Santana in 1967.
There were times Monday when Alcaraz appeared to be something less than his
best, far from the form he displayed during his epic five-set, 5 1/2-hour
comeback victory over No. 1 Jannik Sinner for the championship at Roland-Garros.
Alcaraz double-faulted nine times. He faced a hard-to-believe 21 break points.
He made more unforced errors, 62, than winners, 52.
He chalked some of that up to jitters.
"It doesn't matter the winning streak that I have right now, that I've been
playing great on grass, that I've been preparing really well," said Alcaraz,
who beat Novak Djokovic in the 2023 and 2024 finals. "Wimbledon is different. I
could feel today that I was really nervous at the beginning."
Next for Alcaraz will be a match Wednesday against Oliver Tarvet, a 21-year-old
British qualifier who plays college tennis at the University of San Diego and
is ranked 733rd.
Still, Alcaraz said: "I have to improve in the next round."
Fognini --- whose wife, 2015 U.S. Open champion Flavia Pennetta, held one of
their children in the stands --- is a self-described hothead and is known for
mid-match flareups, including at Wimbledon, where he was fined $3,000 in 2019
for saying during a match that he wished "a bomb would explode at the club" and
a then-record $27,500 in 2014 for a series of outbursts. He was put on a
two-year probation by the Grand Slam Board in 2017 after insulting a female
chair umpire at the U.S. Open and getting kicked out of that tournament.
Such behavior wasn't displayed Monday. And when Alcaraz pushed a forehand long
to cede the fourth set, Fognini nodded toward his guest box, where a member of
his entourage stood to snap a photo with a cellphone. Things were
picture-perfect for Fognini at that moment.
But at the outset of the fifth --- the first time the previous year's male
champ was pushed that far in the first round since Roger Federer in 2010 ---
Alcaraz recalibrated.
When the Spaniard broke to lead 2-0 in that set with a backhand volley winner,
he pointed toward the stands, threw an uppercut and screamed, "Vamos!" In the
next game, he saved a pair of break points, before the match was paused for
more than 10 minutes because a spectator felt ill amid record-breaking high
temperatures for Day 1 of Wimbledon.
When they resumed, Alcaraz outplayed Fognini the rest of the way. Fognini said
he cried in the locker room afterward.
What else happened at Wimbledon on Monday?
While Alcaraz escaped, seven seeded men exited on Day 1, including 2021
runner-up Matteo Berrettini, No. 8 Holger Rune, No. 9 Daniil Medvedev --- who
also lost in the first round at the French Open --- No. 16 Francisco Cerundolo,
No. 20 Alexei Popyrin, No. 24 Stefanos Tsitsipas --- who quit because of a
persistent lower-back problem --- and No. 31 Tallon Griekspoor. No. 20 Jelena
Ostapenko, the 2017 French Open champ, lost, while women's winners included No.
1 Aryna Sabalenka, No. 6 Madison Keys, 2023 Wimbledon winner Marketa
Vondrousova and 2021 U.S. Open champion Emma Raducanu.
Who plays at Wimbledon on Tuesday?
No. 2 Coco Gauff, coming off her second major title, plays in Day 2's last
match at Centre Court against Dayana Yastremska. The other matches in the main
arena, starting at 1:30 p.m. local time (8:30 a.m. EDT), are defending champion
Barbora Krejcikova against Alexandra Eala, followed by 24-time Grand Slam
champion Djokovic against Alexandre Muller. No. 1 Sinner meets fellow Italian
Luca Nardi at No. 1 Court.
___
Howard Fendrich has been the AP's tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories
here: https://apnews.com/author/howard-fendrich. More AP tennis:
https://apnews.com/hub/tennis
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