Carlos Alcaraz: Roger Federer’s ex-coach reveals where Spaniard ‘lost joy’ in 2024

edberg volleys

Hall of Fame
Carlos Alcaraz “lost a little bit of joy” after his Olympic Games final defeat, according to former ATP star and Roger Federer’s ex-coach Paul Annacone.

World No 3 Alcaraz was beaten by Novak Djokovic in the Olympic final in Paris, with the Spaniard forced to settle for a silver medal at Roland Garros.

That came following a hugely successful summer for the 21-year-old, who captured his first French Open title in June before successfully defending his Wimbledon crown the following month.

However, Alcaraz’s Olympics loss was followed by a loss to Gael Monfils in his opening Cincinnati Open match, before he was stunned by Botic van de Zandschulp in round two of the US Open.



The Spaniard rebounded with successful Laver Cup and China Open campaigns, though his initial dip in form after Paris 2024 was noticeable.

And, speaking on the Inside-In Podcast, Federer and Pete Sampras’s former coach Annacone believes his defeat to Djokovic had a significant impact.


He said: “You have to find what motivates you and stick with it. And I think Carlos Alcaraz is a joyful player. I think this year he lost a little bit of that joy, for a multitude of reasons.

“I think one of his greatest accomplishments was one of the biggest obstacles he had to overcome this year, which was getting ‘only’ a silver medal.

“That’s a great accomplishment, but I think it broke his heart a little bit at the Olympics, and I think it messed him up a little bit for the rest of the summer.”
Alcaraz also struggled towards the rest of the season following his run to a fourth title of 2024 in Beijing.

The Spaniard was beaten in the quarter-final of the Shanghai Masters and round three of the Paris Masters, before a group-stage exit at the ATP Finals in Turin.

His season came to a close this week in Malaga, with Spain beaten by the Netherlands in a surprise quarter-final result at the Davis Cup Finals.

Only chief rival Jannik Sinner won more ATP Tour singles titles than Alcaraz in 2024, though the Spaniard is only at world No 3 in the ATP Rankings.

Alexander Zverev sits in between him and world No 1 Sinner, with the 21-year-old struggling with consistency during parts of the season.

Alcaraz’s ranking means he could well find himself on the same side of the draw as Sinner at the Australian Open next January.
 

nolefam_2024

Bionic Poster
I'll will always dislike random comments from random podcasts becoming full articles. He's not "revealing" anything. Paul doesn't know Carlos, it's just random speculation.
Plus he actually played BETTER in 24 than 23 I think.

His post usopen run this year is much better than clueless run last year.
 
Fortunately Sinner isn't good enough to beat Alcaraz, so the rankings have no impact.
Alcaraz 3-0 vs. Sinner, including 2-0 on hardcourt :giggle:
Plus Sinner might be banned for 2 years anyway...
So imagine what the slam race will look like by 2027, as Alcaraz already has 4 slams while Sinner only 2!
 

Aabye5

G.O.A.T.
Carlos Alcaraz “lost a little bit of joy” after his Olympic Games final defeat, according to former ATP star and Roger Federer’s ex-coach Paul Annacone.

World No 3 Alcaraz was beaten by Novak Djokovic in the Olympic final in Paris, with the Spaniard forced to settle for a silver medal at Roland Garros.

That came following a hugely successful summer for the 21-year-old, who captured his first French Open title in June before successfully defending his Wimbledon crown the following month.

However, Alcaraz’s Olympics loss was followed by a loss to Gael Monfils in his opening Cincinnati Open match, before he was stunned by Botic van de Zandschulp in round two of the US Open.



The Spaniard rebounded with successful Laver Cup and China Open campaigns, though his initial dip in form after Paris 2024 was noticeable.

And, speaking on the Inside-In Podcast, Federer and Pete Sampras’s former coach Annacone believes his defeat to Djokovic had a significant impact.


He said: “You have to find what motivates you and stick with it. And I think Carlos Alcaraz is a joyful player. I think this year he lost a little bit of that joy, for a multitude of reasons.

“I think one of his greatest accomplishments was one of the biggest obstacles he had to overcome this year, which was getting ‘only’ a silver medal.

“That’s a great accomplishment, but I think it broke his heart a little bit at the Olympics, and I think it messed him up a little bit for the rest of the summer.”
Alcaraz also struggled towards the rest of the season following his run to a fourth title of 2024 in Beijing.

The Spaniard was beaten in the quarter-final of the Shanghai Masters and round three of the Paris Masters, before a group-stage exit at the ATP Finals in Turin.

His season came to a close this week in Malaga, with Spain beaten by the Netherlands in a surprise quarter-final result at the Davis Cup Finals.

Only chief rival Jannik Sinner won more ATP Tour singles titles than Alcaraz in 2024, though the Spaniard is only at world No 3 in the ATP Rankings.

Alexander Zverev sits in between him and world No 1 Sinner, with the 21-year-old struggling with consistency during parts of the season.

Alcaraz’s ranking means he could well find himself on the same side of the draw as Sinner at the Australian Open next January.

Please let them be on the same side of the draw (y)
 

albertobra

Hall of Fame
Fortunately Sinner isn't good enough to beat Alcaraz, so the rankings have no impact.
Alcaraz 3-0 vs. Sinner, including 2-0 on hardcourt :giggle:
Plus Sinner might be banned for 2 years anyway...
So imagine what the slam race will look like by 2027, as Alcaraz already has 4 slams while Sinner only 2!
H2H is a quite unreliable statistic. Even more short term. Post olimpics touneys Carlitos hardly made it past firsts rounds. Not allowing H2H to be more consistent in a period where Sinner was more consistent.
 

Aabye5

G.O.A.T.
As for the Annacone article. Pure nonsense.

I think he makes a good point. Carlos has been shown to get into ruts before, and he had one post-Olympics this year. He's a very emotional player, and that clearly took a lot out of him emotionally.
 
H2H is a quite unreliable statistic. Even more short term. Post olimpics touneys Carlitos hardly made it past firsts rounds. Not allowing H2H to be more consistent in a period where Sinner was more consistent.
Well I definitely don't measure greatness by who makes it past the first round :rolleyes:
I measure greatness by who wins 4 slams before everyone else, and who wins slams on clay, grass and hardcourt.
Not only that, its very clear Alcaraz is nowhere near his prime, as he's mostly playing with instinct instead of strategy!
So imagine when Alcaraz gets a strategic coach, or maybe Ferrero is strategic but Alcaraz is ignoring him... either way, he's only just scraping the surface.

I think he makes a good point. Carlos has been shown to get into ruts before, and he had one post-Olympics this year. He's a very emotional player, and that clearly took a lot out of him emotionally.
That shows you how legendary Alcaraz is, 4 slams by age 21, and ruts!
He even has a Silver medal and has won every slam except for AO.
Whereas Sinner is a couple of years older and his only clay title is 2022 Umag :laughing:

7-6 1-6 1-6

How many titles has Alcaraz won at indoor level?
Indoor has no relevance to greatness, because I remember when Nadal led the slam race, he was universally considered greater than Djokovic, despite the enormous gulf between them indoors!
 
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Winner Sinner

Hall of Fame
Well I definitely don't measure greatness by who makes it past the first round :rolleyes:
I measure greatness by who wins 4 slams before everyone else, and who wins slams on clay, grass and hardcourt.
Not only that, its very clear Alcaraz is nowhere near his prime, as he's mostly playing with instinct instead of strategy!
So imagine when Alcaraz gets a strategic coach, or maybe Ferrero is strategic but Alcaraz is ignoring him... either way, he's only just scraping the surface.


That shows you how legendary Alcaraz is, 4 slams by age 21, and ruts!
He even has a Silver medal and has won every slam except for AO.
Whereas Sinner is a couple of years older and his only clay title is 2022 Umag :laughing:
7-6 1-6 1-6

How many titles has Alcaraz won at indoor level?
 
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