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Djokovic Advances to US Open Semifinal After Four-Set Win Over Taylor Fritz

Djokovic edged Fritz in four sets to reach the US Open semifinal, where he will meet Carlos Alcaraz.

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Novak Djokovic moved into the US Open semifinal with a 6-3, 7-5, 3-6, 6-4 victory over Taylor Fritz, setting up a meeting with Carlos Alcaraz. The match was competitive across four sets, but Djokovic again proved decisive on the points that mattered most.

Fritz acknowledged the gulf between them plainly. “I think the first, almost like seven or eight times I played him, I probably just wasn’t a good-enough player to really have that much of a chance.” He pushed Djokovic, raised his serving level, and exploited a concentration dip from Djokovic at times, but could not finish the job.

Stylistically the two players resembled one another: similar builds, heavy baseline games, semi-Western forehands and two-handed backhands. Fritz produced more aces and won a higher percentage of first-serve points, yet Djokovic did marginally more on nearly every other measure. He extended rallies, placed shots closer to the lines, and transitioned better. Djokovic was also the more reliable returner and defender.

Serving proved pivotal. Djokovic saved 11 of 13 break points overall; Fritz saved five of nine. A turning sequence came in the second set: Fritz broke late to level at 5-5, but then double faulted twice, the second at break point, to hand Djokovic the set. Earlier in that set Djokovic had been forced to survive multiple break-point threats, and he held his nerve.

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“In many of my service games I was just trying to stay alive, fight for every ball,” Djokovic said. “He was aggressive, staying close to the line, not easy to play him.” Djokovic added later: “I was lucky to save some crucial break points in the second set,” and “For most of the second and third set, he was the better player.”

Fritz remained competitive into the fourth set and matched Djokovic shot for shot through the first eight games. But at 4-4 Djokovic held at love, and he closed out the match on his third match point after a long, tense final game. “It was incredibly close match, it was really anybody’s match,” Djokovic said. “In these kind of matches, a few points decide the winner. It was fortunately coming on my side, end of the fourth. That last game was nerve-wracking.”

Fritz reflected on the missed opportunities: “That’s one of the things that makes, like, the great players great. They win the big points, and that’s something that I kind of touched on before the match is, like, I’m going to need to go out and take those points from him,” and “He’s not just going to hand them over to me.” He added, “That’s exactly what happened. A lot of my weapons, aggressive shots were just not there, letting me down. So I felt like it was tough for me to go out and take those points.”

Djokovic was modest in victory: “I wear my heart on my sleeve,” he said. “I’m really proud of the fight I put in.”

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Mouratoglou says Alcaraz’s shaved head became an on-court asset at the US Open

Mouratoglou called Alcaraz’s shaved head a weapon that reinforces his physical, intimidating game now.

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Carlos Alcaraz arrived at the US Open with a markedly different look after a haircut went wrong and his hair was reduced to a few millimetres. The five-time Grand Slam champion, 22, explained the change came after a miscommunication at home. “Quite different I guess. I felt like my hair was really long already,” he said. “And before the tournament I said that I really want to get a haircut.

“Suddenly my brother just misunderstood with the machine. He just cut it and the only way to fix it is just to shave it off. To be honest it’s not that good… it’s not that bad I guess.”

Alcaraz also noted his usual barber did not make the trip to the United States. “New York is too far away for Victor,” Alcaraz explained. “I’m not really into hair at all. I’m the guy who thinks like, ‘okay hair grows,’ and in a few days it’s gonna be okay I guess. It just happened and that’s it.”

What might have been dismissed as a fashion mishap drew a different response from Patrick Mouratoglou. The coach, speaking on Instagram, suggested the hairstyle could influence opponents at Flushing Meadows. “I think Alcaraz’s biggest weapon at the US Open is his haircut,” Mouratoglou said with a smile, and elaborated: “I think it highlights his physicality and animality that defines him so well and makes him so scary for players. And I think it can have an impact.

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“I mean, not that he needs the impact. Of course, he doesn’t need this impact on players. Everybody’s scared of him, except maybe Sinner and Djokovic.

“But the feeling that players can have about Alcaraz is reinforced even more by the hairstyle.”

Alcaraz will face Novak Djokovic next, a match that carries extra weight given their recent history. Having lost four of their past five meetings, Alcaraz made his intentions clear. “Novak, we all know Novak’s game. It doesn’t matter that he has been out of the Tour since Wimbledon. [He’s] playing great matches here,” he said. “I know he’s hungry. I know his ambition for more, so let’s see. I know I played a lot of times against him. I really want revenge. That’s obvious.”

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Djokovic vs Alcaraz: US Open semi-final — prize money, points and live rankings

Prize money, ranking points and live standings explained ahead of Djokovic v Alcaraz semi-final. Now

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Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz meet in Friday’s US Open semi-final with substantial ranking points and prize money on the line. Both are former champions in New York and this is their first meeting since the Australian Open earlier this year when Djokovic stunned his younger rival.

Despite fitness struggles, 38-year-old Djokovic has prevailed against several younger opponents to reach a record 14th US Open men’s singles semi-final. Alcaraz has advanced to the last four without dropping a set. By reaching the semi-finals, each player has already secured 800 ATP ranking points.

Twelve months ago Djokovic earned just 100 points at the US Open after a third-round loss to Alexei Popyrin. That result leaves him provisionally up 700 ranking points to 4,830 in the ATP Live Rankings and moved him up three places to world No 4 as things stand.

Alcaraz was eliminated in the second round in 2024 by Botic van de Zandschulp and collected only 50 points. His run to this year’s semi-finals is provisionally worth a 750-point increase. Alcaraz holds 10,340 points in the ATP Live Rankings and is provisionally back as world No 1, ahead of incumbent Jannik Sinner. Sinner must better Alcaraz’s result to remain at No 1. Whoever wins Friday’s semi-final will earn 1,300 ATP ranking points.

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Prize money at this year’s US Open has also risen. Each semi-finalist in both singles draws will receive $1,260,000, an increase from the $1,000,000 paid to beaten semi-finalists in 2024. Reaching the final guarantees at least $2,500,000, and the champion will be paid $5,000,000.

Career and season earnings underline the financial stakes. Djokovic’s career prize-money total stands at $188,934,053, the highest in tennis history. Alcaraz is sixth on the all-time ATP list with $48,486,628. In 2025 Alcaraz has earned $10,631,652 and Djokovic has won $3,400,133.

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Toni Nadal urges tougher sanctions after Medvedev’s US Open outburst

Toni Nadal calls for stricter penalties for racket-breaking after Medvedev outburst. at the US Open.

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Toni Nadal has called on tennis authorities to impose stronger penalties for on-court racket destruction, describing the behaviour as increasingly common and deserving of action. He asked organisers for harsher measures and demanded reflection on the wider problem, arguing that the sport should not tolerate these episodes.

Toni said tennis must introduce “sporting punishments” to discourage such conduct and added: “And also to consider why this type of reprehensible behaviour occurs more frequently in our sport than in other disciplines.

“I have never seen a ping-pong player break a racket, and very rarely have I seen a golfer punish their club after making a mistake.”

The remarks were prompted by Daniil Medvedev’s behaviour during his match against Benjamin Bonzi at the US Open. A photographer walking onto the court prompted chair umpire Greg Allensworth to give Bonzi another first serve, at which point Medvedev lost his temper, talking into the umpire’s microphone and criticising the official’s professionalism. “He wants to go home, guys. He doesn’t like to be here. He gets paid by the match, not by the hour,” Medvedev could be heard saying to the umpire and the fans.

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Rafa Nadal criticised Medvedev’s inability to control such outbursts, highlighting that fines have not ended the behaviour. “I am surprised that a player of Medvedev’s stature is unable to calm his nerves and is willing to project this image of himself, and also that the heavy financial penalties subsequently imposed on him have failed to eradicate his behaviour,” Nadal said.

Nadal continued: “In the case of tennis, I believe that the combination of youth, stress and the feeling of lack of control caused by the extreme speed at which the ball travels today triggers a frustration that tennis players are increasingly unable to control.

“And finally, we must take into account a fact that is as uncontrollable as it is discouraging: the enormous impact and approval that unedifying behaviour has, which is most widely reproduced on social media and, unfortunately, widely approved.”

Though known for his intensity, Nadal has never broken a racket on court. Toni once told him, “If you throw a racket, I’m no longer your coach.” Instead, the nearest instance came at the 2022 US Open when Nadal was seen hitting himself with his racket after a lost point.

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