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Alcaraz Survives Marathon Set, Keeps Calendar Slam Dream Alive in Upset-Free Melbourne March

Last updated: January 21, 2026 5:00 pm
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Alcaraz Survives Marathon Set, Keeps Calendar Slam Dream Alive in Upset-Free Melbourne March
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In a draw that refused chaos, Carlos Alcaraz stared down a 78-minute first-set war against Yannick Hanfmann, then tore through the next two sets to stay on course for the youngest career Golden Slam ever—and the first in a calendar year since 1988.

Why the top seed needed every minute of that 78-minute opener

Carlos Alcaraz had never played a single set this long at a Slam—until Wednesday night in Rod Laver Arena. Hanfmann’s lefty serve-and-volley surges and 13 aces forced the Spaniard into 28 baseline exchanges of nine shots or more, the kind of graft usually reserved for clay. The stat that mattered: Alcaraz won 17 of them, flipping the set in the tiebreak with a hooked forehand winner that clipped the sideline at 6-4.

The 7-6 (4), 6-3, 6-2 scoreline looks routine; the optics were anything but. Alcaraz’s first-serve percentage jumped from 48 in the opener to 72 over sets two and three, and his average rally speed dropped a full 4 km/h—an intentional gear change that shows he can throttle down when dragged into a knife fight.

Calendar Slam math: what has to happen next

Only Rod Laver (1969) and Steffi Graf (1988) have swept all four majors in the same season. Alcaraz already owns Roland Garros and Wimbledon plus the 2025 US Open; if he exits Melbourne with the trophy, the feat becomes statistically probable rather than mythical.

  • Third-round opponent: Corentin Moutet, the crafty left-hander who led 18-year-old Michael Zheng when the American retired down 0-2 in the fourth.
  • Projected fourth round: Alexander Bublik, 10-2 in 2026 and fresh off a straight-sets dismissal of Marton Fucsovics.
  • Quarter-final hurdle: either Holger Rune or last year’s finalist Alexander Zverev, who survived a four-set scrap with Alexandre Muller.

Alcaraz is 4-0 lifetime versus Bublik and 5-2 against Zverev, but all seven of those matches came on hard courts where return games average 6.3 minutes—exactly the tempo Hanfmann forced on him Wednesday.

The draw that refused to bend

For the first time since 2021, every men’s seed in the top 16 reached the third round. The casualty-free scoreboard tightens the probability models: ATP data shows top-16 seeds hold a 78 percent win rate from the third round onward when none have been eliminated before that stage, up 11 points from years with early upsets.

Andrey Rublev flirted with disaster, saving 10 of 12 break points against Portuguese qualifier Jaime Faria, the same player who took a set off Novak Djokovic in Paris last spring. Rublev’s 5-for-9 break-point conversion rate looks modest until you realize Faria fired 39 clean winners—13 more than the Russian—and still walked off court a loser.

Tommy Paul, the highest-seeded American at No. 19, needed just 106 minutes to oust Thiago Agustin Tirante, striking 34 winners to 18 errors. Paul is quietly 8-1 in 2026 and has dropped only one set in Melbourne; his third-round matchup with Francisco Cerundolo feels like a pre-quarter-final blockbuster.

De Minaur keeps home hopes breathing

Australian No. 1 Alex de Minaur lost the first-set tiebreak to 20-year-old Hamad Medjedovic, then reeled off 18 of the next 21 games. The turnaround hinged on a single adjustment: court positioning. De Minaur stepped two feet inside the baseline on second-serve returns, crushing six clean return winners in the third set alone. With the crowd volume peaking at 112 dB—louder than a chainsaw—de Minaur has now reached the third round in seven consecutive Slam appearances, the longest active streak on tour.

What the bracket tells us about Friday

Thursday is a maintenance day for the men’s draw, but Friday’s third-round slate is already taking shape as the most top-heavy of the tournament. Projected match-ups include:

  1. Alcaraz vs. Moutet—lefty spin versus lefty flair.
  2. Zverev vs. Fokina—power baseline chess against Spanish counter-punching.
  3. Rublev vs. Etcheverry—two of the tour’s heaviest foreheads colliding at 120 mph.

Oddsmakers reacted instantly: Alcaraz’s title probability shortened from 3.75 to 3.40 at major books, while the market for “no seeded casualties before the quarters” flipped to –210, implying a 68 percent chance the orderly march continues.

Key insight—fitness, not firepower, will decide this title

Through two rounds, Alcaraz has already spent 5 hours 11 minutes on court, the heaviest load of any top-four seed. His average heart-rate spike in the Hanfmann match was 187 bpm, comparable to his five-set war with Jannik Sinner in the 2025 US Open semi. The good news: he’s winning 82 percent of points when he gets to the net, a career-best on hard courts, proving he can shorten points when his legs demand it.

The takeaway: If the Spaniar can compress rallies before the quarter-finals, the calendar Slam chatter moves from hype to genuine trajectory—because the draw, at least for now, is doing him no favors at all.

For instant, expert-level reaction to every serve, swing, and storyline in Melbourne—and every major sport—keep your next click on onlytrustedinfo.com. We turn breaking news into the analysis you need before anyone else even files the box score.

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