Get Updates
Get notified of breaking news, exclusive insights, and must-see stories!

Alcaraz Wins Australian Open, Keeps Djokovic Short of Landmark 25th Title

Carlos Alcaraz wrote a new chapter at Australian Open 2026, beating Novak Djokovic 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5 in the men’s singles final at Rod Laver Arena. The result delivered Alcaraz a first Australian Open crown and completed a Career Grand Slam, while Djokovic’s push for a record 25th major title stalled again.

The night also ended Djokovic’s perfect record in Australian Open finals and delayed another landmark. Djokovic had aimed to become the oldest Grand Slam singles champion, but the physical strain and Alcaraz’s tempo proved too much. After three hours and two minutes, Djokovic’s last forehand missed, and Alcaraz collapsed on the court in relief.

AI Summary

AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

Carlos Alcaraz defeated Novak Djokovic 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5 in the 2026 Australian Open final, held at Rod Laver Arena, completing his Career Grand Slam and claiming his first Australian Open title. The victory, achieved on February 1, 2026, made the 22-year-old Spaniard the youngest player to achieve the feat.
Carlos Alcaraz

Australian Open 2026: Career Grand Slam milestone for Carlos Alcaraz

By lifting the trophy in Melbourne, Alcaraz joined an elite group of men with a Career Grand Slam in the Open Era. The Spaniard, aged 22, became the youngest to achieve it, overtaking Rafael Nadal’s previous mark. Alcaraz also became only the sixth man to win all four majors, alongside Rod Laver, Andre Agassi, Roger Federer, Nadal and Djokovic.

Alcaraz’s achievement arrived after years of targeting the Australian Open in particular. This was the major that had remained missing from the collection, the title that Alcaraz had chased since childhood. On 1 February 2026, under the closed roof, that chase finally ended as Melbourne Park responded with a full-throated roar.

Australian Open 2026: Match score and key numbers

Both players entered the final after energy-sapping five-set semifinals, adding intrigue to the physical battle. Djokovic had survived Lorenzo Musetti earlier in the event, then edged Jannik Sinner in a punishing contest. Alcaraz battled past Alexander Zverev with similar grit, leaning strongly on self-belief and his ability to reset under pressure.

Alcaraz’s victory could be seen in the way momentum shifted across the four sets. Early domination by Djokovic gave way to control from the Spaniard, who finished with superior energy. The scoreline captured that swing clearly, with Alcaraz winning three straight sets after the opener slipped away.

Australian Open 2026 Men's Final Score
Carlos Alcaraz vs Novak Djokovic 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5
Duration 3 hours 2 minutes

Australian Open 2026: Novak Djokovic starts fast in Rod Laver Arena

The match opened with Djokovic dictating almost everything. The Serbian settled quickly, broke serve for 3-1 and never allowed Alcaraz to recover in the first set. Djokovic won 93 percent of points behind his first serve, denying the Spaniard any real rhythm on return and controlling rallies behind a solid forehand.

From the back of the court, Djokovic redirected Alcaraz’s pace with depth and accuracy, forcing extra shots in almost every exchange. Alcaraz did strike 10 winners but leaked nine unforced errors at costly moments. Djokovic stayed cleaner, hit the lines often and mixed power with patience, closing the opener with authority and a clear message of control.

Australian Open 2026: Carlos Alcaraz flips the script in second set

The second set brought a swift shift. Alcaraz adjusted his patterns, while Djokovic’s first-serve percentage dropped to 58 percent, creating chances on return. As rain approached, officials decided to close the Rod Laver Arena roof, briefly halting play and changing the conditions for both players under the lights.

The pause initially seemed to upset Alcaraz, but the reset sharpened focus instead of breaking it. Alcaraz started hitting his forehand flatter and deeper, driving Djokovic behind the baseline and dragging the Serb from corner to corner. Errors crept into Djokovic’s game, with 11 unforced mistakes appearing as Alcaraz’s timing improved.

Australian Open 2026: Momentum swings as Carlos Alcaraz takes control

Alcaraz pounced early on Djokovic’s weaker second serve, striking aggressive returns that landed close to the baseline. One crucial break sent the crowd into full voice, and Alcaraz backed it up with strong holds, helped by repeated chants of “Vamos!” from the stands. Djokovic tried drop shots and net approaches, but the pattern had turned.

With nine winners in the set and a more confident body language, Alcaraz levelled the match at one set all. The earlier fear of defeat, which had surfaced against Zverev, no longer showed. Instead, the belief Alcaraz spoke about during that semifinal now played out in real time, as the Spaniard seized control of the final’s momentum.

Australian Open 2026: Physical battle and third-set breakthrough

The third set underlined the physical story. Djokovic opened with a love hold and some big first serves, hinting at a reset. Yet signs from the long semifinal against Sinner soon appeared, with the broadcaster highlighting slight dips in movement and slower recovery after extended rallies as the set reached 2-2.

Alcaraz sensed that shift and extended points deliberately, forcing Djokovic to hit one more ball again and again. In the fifth game, the pressure finally cracked Djokovic’s serve. Alcaraz broke, igniting Rod Laver Arena and consolidating the advantage with bold serving and ruthless treatment of any short ball that landed in his strike zone.

Australian Open 2026: Final set tension and closing stages

Djokovic still produced flashes, saving himself with clutch serving and patches of inspired shot-making, but the error tally kept rising. Djokovic hit 11 winners in the third set but also 14 unforced errors, while Alcaraz maintained speed and intensity. The Spaniard wrapped up the set 6-3, moving one set from the trophy and tightening his grip on the contest.

The fourth set delivered the tightest drama of the night. Djokovic raised intensity again, serving strongly and defending with trademark resilience to extend rallies. For the first time since the opening set, Djokovic looked close to control, driving deep returns and striking backhands that disturbed Alcaraz’s patterns and drew loud approval from a packed arena.

Alcaraz, though, held nerve during several tense service games, mixing sliced defence, disguised drop shots and well-timed aces. At 5-4, Djokovic forced the score back to level and seemed to push towards a tie-break. One loose forehand from Djokovic in the next crucial game decided everything, and Alcaraz secured the decisive break and with it the Australian Open title.

Notifications
Settings
Clear Notifications
Notifications
Use the toggle to switch on notifications
  • Block for 8 hours
  • Block for 12 hours
  • Block for 24 hours
  • Don't block
Gender
Select your Gender
  • Male
  • Female
  • Others
Age
Select your Age Range
  • Under 18
  • 18 to 25
  • 26 to 35
  • 36 to 45
  • 45 to 55
  • 55+