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Updated Jan 18, 2026 · 19:26
Sports World News Updated Jan 18, 2026

Alcaraz Dominates Walton, Launches Historic Australian Open Grand Slam Quest

World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz began his Australian Open campaign with a commanding straight-sets victory over Australia's Adam Walton. The Spaniard displayed his trademark power and precision, winning 6-3, 7-6, 6-2 in just under two hours. Alcaraz was dominant on serve and effective in key moments, breaking his opponent four times. With this win, he launches his quest to become the youngest man ever to complete a Career Grand Slam.

Aus Open: Alcaraz begins career grand slam quest with win against Walton in first round

Melbourne, Jan 18

World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz opened his Australian Open campaign in commanding fashion, defeating Australia's Adam Walton 6-3, 7-6, 6-2 in a first-round match at the Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne on Sunday.

The top-seeded Spaniard needed just under two hours to outperform the home favourite, displaying his trademark blend of power, precision, and court coverage to take control of the contest. Alcaraz struck eight aces and committed only one double fault, underlining his efficiency on serve throughout the match.

Alcaraz dominated the opening set, breaking Walton early to establish a strong lead. The Australian raised his level in the second set, pushing the Spaniard into a tie-break, but Alcaraz responded with authority, winning seven of the nine points to claim the breaker and move two sets ahead.

The third set followed a similar pattern to the first, with Alcaraz breaking serve at key moments to seal the match comfortably. He finished with 101 points won compared to Walton's 73 and claimed 19 games to his opponent's 11.

The Spaniard was particularly effective on serve, winning 76 per cent of points on his first delivery and 70 per cent on his second. Walton struggled to capitalise on his chances, converting just one of his break-point opportunities, while Alcaraz broke serve four times from 10 chances.

Alcaraz also outperformed Walton in receiving points, winning 40 compared to the Australian's 22, and maintained control during longer rallies, highlighted by his ability to string together a maximum of eight consecutive points.

Carlos Alcaraz is chasing the historic Career Grand Slam at the 2026 Australian Open, which would make him the youngest man ever to win all four majors (Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, US Open). He's also looking to solidify his place among the all-time greats by continuing his dominance at the big events.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

Impressive stats, especially the serve. Winning 76% on first serve is just dominant. Walton put up a fight in the second set, but Alcaraz's quality shone through. Exciting to watch a potential legend in the making.

Vikram M

The boy is a phenom, no doubt. But let's be real, the article is hyping the "youngest to win Career Grand Slam" angle a bit too much. He hasn't even won the Australian Open yet! One match at a time, please. The pressure of that narrative itself can be a burden. Still, jawaab nahin hai uska game ka! 🔥

Priyanka N

His court coverage is insane! Reminds me of a young Nadal with that energy. It's 2 AM here and I was glued to the screen. Worth losing sleep over. Hope he goes all the way and creates history.

Rohit P

Solid win. But honestly, as an Indian sports fan, while I admire Alcaraz, it just highlights the gap we have. We celebrate one Sumit Nagal winning a single round, while these guys are chasing immortal records. We need a systemic change in how we nurture talent. Alcaraz is brilliant, but our focus should be on building our own champions.

Karthik V

The numbers tell the story: 101 points to 73, 19 games to 11. Total domination. That second serve win percentage of 70% is a killer stat. Walton never stood a chance. On to the next one for Carlitos!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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