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Australian Open 2026: The agony of being Alexander Zverev at the age of Carlos Alcaraz | Tennis News – The Tech Word News

January 30, 2026
Carlos Alcaraz of Spain is congratulated by Alexander Zverev (R) after their semi-final match at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Dita Alangakra) For those unfamiliar, the term sigma male is a modern Jungian internet archetype used to describe a man who is seemingly independent, confident, and operates outside of traditional social hierarchies. Think Tyler Durden, Travis Bickle or John Wick.Of course, like most internet slang, it has become a parody of its original meaning, with the term being used to describe malignant (and often misogynistic) internet personalities who appeal to incels. The term was more in vogue last year after influencers Jake Paul and Andrew Tate lost fights to professional athletes, with some even calling the losses “9/11 for sigma men.” Internet culture rants aside, the losses were a reminder of the gulf that exists between regular people and athletes. Like the time billionaire Bill Ackman learned it while participating in the Hall of Fame Open where he could barely put his racquet on the ball.Most non-athletes would not last in a cage, ring or court with a professional. But even among professional athletes, there is a rare breed who have access to a metaphorical place their less sanctified peers wish they could go. They operate at a level that even fellow professionals cannot understand. It is mental and physical.As Andre Agassi said after his loss in the 2005 US Open final to Roger Federer: “In the tiebreak, he goes to a place I don’t know… I feel for the man who is destined to play Agassi with his Sampras.”Now, Agassi is no shrinking violet; he is the first man to win a career Golden Slam. One of the greatest comebacks in the game, yet he couldn’t believe what Federer was doing.During their time, the Big Three showed how they were a cut above the rest. Their dedication to the craft was unmatched. Novak Djokovic has spent the last decade living as a hermit. Rafa Nadal took his body to a level that seemed unfathomable, perfectly embodied by John McEnroe’s line: “This kid is sensational, is he going to play every point like this?” Federer, Agassi noted, looked like he could play a professional match without breaking a sweat, as if he were wearing a smoking jacket instead of tennis gear. Federer looked like he was dancing on the court. He still covered every blade of grass, every grain of sand, every inch of dirt. Djokovic looked – and still looks, at 38 – he could go on for days, seemingly powered by a perpetual motion machine from another universe.Ivan Lendl, another man who knows his way around the tennis circuit, observed in 2017 while coaching Andy Murray, who was trying to come back from hip surgery: “The top guys are the top guys because they do things a little bit better than the other guys. Yes, they can get mad, or others can make them mad, but when they play 100 times, they win the whole physical package, they win more than half the movement. It’s about something better than the guys down there.”

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And at Melbourne Park, Carlos Alcaraz reminded us how he is cut from the same cloth as the GOATS before his era.Ahead of the semi-finals, the buzz surrounding the Australian Open – and the online chatter following it – suggested it had been too one-sided a tournament so far. One that might have been an email instead of an entire tournament, as a Sincarazu final seemed inevitable. Sinner and Alcaraz faced each other in six finals in 2025, including three Grand Slams. They split the last eight major tournaments equally. And their meeting at the first Slam in 2026 seemed inevitable until it seemed impossible when Alcaraz was on the floor.We’ve seen Alcaraz do some remarkable things in his career so far. His drop shot can put opponents on the wrong foot. In the last few years, it has fulfilled its promise to become a service robot. Sometimes he hits shots from angles that even the cameras don’t catch.Alcaraz was cruising against Zverev with a two-set lead when he was brought down by cramps. And suddenly he couldn’t walk, swing or move freely. His movement was oddly reminiscent of Australian cricketer Glenn Maxwell’s against Afghanistan in the 2024 ODI World Cup, where the Australian was pulled off in spasms. But like Maxwell, Alcaraz found a way out.His medical time out will be discussed ad nauseam. Zverev’s outraged response has already generated a million reactions on Tennis Twitter. Boris Becker added his two cents, which he is wont to do in matters outside of tennis.Perhaps organizers at the Slams go out of their way to help the stars, given that their very presence attracts big money and eyeballs. But what is undeniable is that Alcaraz was able to tap into that special fountain of power available only to the greatest players. Zverev’s outburst during the timeout foreshadowed things to come.

Alexander Zverev of Germany gestures to a tournament official during his semifinal match against Carlos Alcaraz of Spain at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake)

Even when Alcaraz got back to his feet, he could barely keep up. And yet he didn’t want to give up. After the match, he explained, “I always say you have to believe in yourself, no matter what (what) you wrestle with, what you’ve been through, you have to always believe in yourself.As Lendl explained, “That’s how people win tournaments — they fight. It’s not easy. You don’t always play your best and you have to get through it and the fight is part of it. When you play, sometimes you feel tired and you have to push through that pain barrier…”The Spaniard never stopped believing, and neither did the crowd, even when Zverev served for the match at 5-4. But in what seemed like an instant, Alcaraz had his hands up, leveled at 5-5 and suddenly led 6-5.To watch them side-by-side was to watch two reactions to pressure unfold in real time. Zverev had the match on his racket, serving at 5-4, physically strong and dictating moves, a player built to impose order. Alcaraz could barely move an hour earlier, yet he constantly sought variety—shots, angled returns, sudden changes of pace—as if chaos itself were a weapon. One tried to force the door shut. The other still opened windows through imagination. In the end, it wasn’t the healthier body that won, but the player willing to come up with solutions when logic said the match was over.One shot summed up the contrast. Alcaraz appeared to hit a normal return but suddenly faked a drop shot at 5-5, which seemed to break Zverev.Zverev is a good player trying to be great. He was the youngest player to debut in the top 20 since Novak Djokovic. He beat Roger Federer on grass when he was 17 years old. Zverev is called Sascha at home, a Russian diminutive for Alexander the Great, who wept after believing there was no world left to conquer. But as the match progressed, one wondered if Sascha could defeat the demons in his mind – the ones that need to be exorcised to win a Grand Slam title.Alcaraz, on the other hand, has no such demons. The career Grand Slam remains the holy grail of tennis. Eight men have done it, four in the Open Era. The youngest so far is Don Budge, who was 22 years and 11 months old when he completed it, although this was at a time when tennis was played on two surfaces: grass and clay. The youngest person to do so in the Open Era was Rafael Nadal at 24 years and three months.Alcaraz, on the other hand, could become the youngest to complete the lineup. In his way will be his great rival Sinner or Novak Djokovic, who is now 38, but refuses to go quietly into the night and wants to become the first man to win 25 Slams. Time will tell which of them emerges victorious, but one thing is certain: whatever happens on Sunday, Alcaraz’s renaissance from defeat will live long in the annals of the Australian Open.

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