WHAT HAPPENED: Daniil Medvedev said he would need an "11 out of 10" performance to end the US Open reign of Carlos Alcaraz. On Friday night in Arthur Ashe Stadium, he turned it up to 12.
The 2021 New York champion beat the defending titlist, 7-6(3), 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, to advance to his third men's singles final at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.
“I said I needed to play 11 out of 10. I played 12 out of 10, except the third set," Medvedev said in his on-court interview. "That’s the only way [to beat Alcaraz]. He’s so young, already two Grand Slams, world No. 1 for many weeks, it’s honestly just pretty unbelievable and I think nobody has done it before him. So to beat him you need to be better than yourself, and I managed to do it.”
In a matchup of two superstars, each with their own unique set of preternatural tennis talents, Medvedev got his calculations just right to neutralize the uber-athletic game of Alcaraz with his own brand of metronomic baseline brilliance. The third seed also leaned on a stellar serving performance that peaked in the second set, when he rattled off three straight love holds.
Medvedev was hanging on at the start, battling through a series of tough holds and saving the only two break points of the first set as Alcaraz flew out of the blocks. But the tide began to turn when Medvedev won 12 straight points on serve late in the set, including a pair of love holds.
The third seed shook off a double fault that made it 3-3 in the tiebreak by hitting two forehand winners in a four-point blitz to close the set. Medvedev drove home that advantage with an instant break in set two, and he did not lose a point on serve in the set until he harmlessly conceded two in serving out the frame.
The inevitable Alcaraz surge came in set three, which he began with a love hold to signal his intent. Always a fan favorite in New York, Alcaraz enjoyed even more backing in Ashe as he began to launch a comeback bid. The Spaniard was in full flow after scoring his first break of the match to lead 3-1, his balletic movements setting him up to power through the lanky Medvedev's defenses.
"I have to be honest, the crowd was absolutely unbelievable today, absolutely unbelievable, and I mean it," Medvedev said. "We had some crazy points, and I felt love to both sides."
With the volume turned up, Alcaraz eased through the third set and fashioned an opening at 15-40 early in set four, before Mededev began to recalibrate his resistance. Medvedev escaped that game and then scored the crucial break on his second break point of a mammoth, seven-deuce game to move to the brink of victory at 4-2.
Alcaraz attacked the net with abandon down the stretch, serving-and-volleying on the majority of the points late in that marathon game. But Medvedev kept forcing him to hit tough volleys, and Alcaraz was stumped on the last two. (Alcaraz finished the match 31-of-42 on serve-and-volley points, and 54-of-70 on total net points.)
"This game was absolutely amazing," said Medvedev. "Every time he had these game points [seven in total], I was saying to myself, 'I can win this game. I can win this game.' I managed to hit some amazing points. We were both pumping up the crowd, because the points were unbelievable.
"When I won it, I was, like, 'Let's go, try to finish the match.' I managed to do it."
In the end, the puzzle presented by Medvedev was too tough for Alcaraz to overcome. It was the third seed's turn to endure a titanic service game in the final game of the match, but he fought off three break points and sealed the deal with a hugely satisfying overhead that bounded high into the stands.
WHAT IT MEANS: Medvedev is once again peaking in New York's concrete jungle. The self-described hard-court specialist has done it before here, in reaching the 2019 final and winning the 2021 title. His latest stretch of dominance sets him up for a rematch of that 2021 final against Novak Djokovic—a match he won in straight sets to deny the Serbian a calendar-year Grand Slam.
In order to stop Djokovic from claiming a record-tying 24th major singles title, Medvedev knows he will need another otherworldly showing.
“The challenge is that you play a guy who won 23 Grand Slams and I have only one," he said of the matchup. "When I beat him here [in the 2021 final], I managed to play better than myself, and I need to do it again. There is no other way.”
Earlier this season, Medvedev reached five straight hard-court finals, claiming four titles. That 24-1 run was capped by a crown in Miami, with the lone blemish coming in a lopsided defeat to Alcaraz in Indian Wells. But after the Spaniard scored another "easy" win (Medvedev's description) against him in the Wimbledon semis, Medvedev has hit a new gear in New York.
Alcaraz was bidding to become the first man to successfully defend the US Open singles title since Roger Federer reigned from 2004-08. With the defeat, he drops to a still-outstanding 24-2 at the Grand Slams dating back to last year's US Open.
MATCH POINT: Medvedev did not win more than three games in a single set against Alcaraz across straight-sets defeats in the Indian Wells final and the Wimbledon semifinal this season.
