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The enigma of Carlos Alcaraz

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The enigma of Carlos Alcaraz

NEW YORK — Within hours of Carlos Alcaraz arriving on site to the US Open Aug. 25, and long before he had even taken the court for his first-round match, he had become the day’s biggest storyline.

Not because of his rivalry with world No. 1 Jannik Sinner, or because he was a favorite to win the title again. Everyone was talking about his new haircut.

“I mean, it’s definitely terrible,” Frances Tiafoe, a two-time US Open semifinalist, said after his match with a laugh before adding a caveat. “He’s my guy though.”

Over the next 48 hours, it felt like every player on tour — from Naomi Osaka to Alexander Zverev to Emma Raducanu to Sinner himself — was asked about, and had an opinion on, Alcaraz’s hair. Each comment seemingly made the internet rounds, and Alcaraz responded to all of it with his signature good-natured humor, blaming his younger brother for the look.

Now, more than a week later, Alcaraz’s hair has already started to grow back, and he has since booked his ticket to the semifinals following a 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 victory over No. 20 seed Jiri Lehecka on Tuesday. And while the questions about his cut have seemed to fade, the incident remains a fascinating reminder of just how beloved he is. While some players are always more popular or approachable than others in the locker room, very few players of Alcaraz’s caliber, at this stage in his career, typically hold that distinction.

It begs the question: How can Alcaraz, a five-time major champion and current world No. 2, be so feared on the tennis court for his blistering athleticism, relentless grit and powerful forehand — but be so well-liked by his opponents off of it?

“It’s so tough to pull off that balance,” Sam Querrey, the former Wimbledon semifinalist-turned-analyst and podcaster, told ESPN this week. “Not many superstars can pull it off. When he walks around the player lounge, you can poke fun of him, and he’s just so cool with everybody. [Roger] Federer and [Rafael] Nadal had that a little bit, but Carlos seems to have more of that [quality].

“He’s a worldwide superstar, but there are parts of him that are just the everyday guy, and people gravitate to that.”


TENNIS, AT ITS CORE, is a deeply individual sport.

On the court, players are alone. While their coaches and support teams are seated nearby, and can give occasional guidance, it ultimately comes down to the player to problem-solve and find a way to win on their own.

Away from competition, players are on the road for most of the year, traveling from hotel room to hotel room and tournament to tournament. It can be an isolating experience, and players often spend most of their time with their respective teams. Many top players over the years have said they find it too difficult to be close with their peers.

“It’s tough to have really good friends on the tour,” five-time major champion Maria Sharapova said in 2011. “I find it difficult to be having dinner with someone one night and then having to play them two days later, because it is at the end of the day an individual sport and we are all very competitive … You know we are not on a team and as far as really close friends go, I have my family who come with me on the road. I don’t hang around in the locker room — it’s my least favorite place in the world.”

While things have changed in recent years — US Open breakout star Taylor Townsend credited the pandemic for shifting locker room dynamics in an interview with ESPN in 2024 — and Querrey insists the men’s locker room has always been a friendlier place, Alcaraz seems to relish being around his peers in a way that perhaps other superstars don’t.

At the start of the tournament, a picture circulated of Alcaraz and Sinner together at Osteria Delbianco, an Italian restaurant in Midtown Manhattan. While Alcaraz later explained it was just a coincidence they were both there, what made it remarkable was that it was believable that they were there together. The same likely wouldn’t have been the case for Sharapova and say, Serena Williams, or Federer and Nadal in the early years of their rivalry.

Before he retired in 2022, Querrey, 37, spent a lot of his career around the Big Three of Nadal, Federer and Novak Djokovic. According to him, Federer “couldn’t have been nicer” if approached, and even was “fine with it” if made fun of, but wasn’t quite as naturally chummy with everyone overall. Nadal was also gracious with his peers, but the language barrier could make it challenging. As Alcaraz has made a deliberate effort to improve his fluency in English, it has allowed him to more seamlessly interact with a larger group of players and those around the tour.

“Carlos speaks better English than Rafa does,” Querrey said. “Therefore, I think he gets sarcasm, humor, things like that in a way that was harder with Rafa. It’s helped him become more of a global star but also allows fellow players and fans to approach him more casually.”



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