Djokovic Storms Past Sinner, Sets Epic Australian Open Final vs Alcaraz

Novak Djokovic fought back from a set down to defeat defending champion Jannik Sinner in a gripping five-set semifinal, advancing to his 11th Australian Open final. In the other semifinal, Carlos Alcaraz outlasted Alexander Zverev in a record five-hour and twenty-seven-minute marathon, the longest semifinal in tournament history. The victory books a final clash between the Serbian legend and the young Spanish top seed, who is now the youngest in the Open Era to reach all four major finals. Djokovic seeks a record-extending 25th Grand Slam title, while Alcaraz aims to complete his Career Slam by winning his first Australian Open.

Key Points: Djokovic vs Alcaraz Australian Open Final After Epic Semis

  • Djokovic ends 5-match losing streak vs Sinner
  • Wins 5-set semi-final to reach 11th AO final
  • Alcaraz wins longest AO semi-final in history vs Zverev
  • Final pits Djokovic's experience vs Alcaraz's quest for Career Slam
4 min read

Australian Open: Djokovic outclasses Sinner in semis, sets title clash with Alcaraz

Novak Djokovic beats Jannik Sinner in a five-set thriller to set up a blockbuster Australian Open final against Carlos Alcaraz, who survived a marathon vs Zverev.

"He saved 16 of 18 break points, dragging himself back into the match with his big-game experience."

Melbourne, January 30

Serbian tennis icon Novak Djokovic produced some of his best tennis of the tournament, snapping his five-match losing streak against young Italian sensation and defending champion Jannik Sinner to reach the final of the Australian Open following a five-set epic at Melbourne on Friday.

Djokovic is now a step closer to his record-extending 25th Grand Slam title and an 11th in Melbourne. The Serbian great won against Sinner in a gripping battle, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, which lasted over four hours, according to the ATP website.

The 38-year-old had dropped the first set and later slipped to a trail of two sets to one, and Djokovic, who had lost in the semifinals of all Grand Slams last year, looked for another exit. However, he saved 16 of 18 break points, dragging himself back into the match with his big-game experience. In the final awaits another young rival of his, Carlos Alcaraz, who is aiming to finally lay his hands on the Australian Open, a trophy that has eluded him despite his number one ranking.

Djokovic has yet to win a Grand Slam title since the US Open 2024, and since then, the meteoric rise of Sinner and Alcaraz has kept him away from the big trophies, with the duo having split past eight major titles between them. Djokovic denied the fourth-successive Sinner-Alcaraz final for a Grand Slam. Had Sinner won, he and Alcaraz could have become just the second pair in the Open Era to meet in four consecutive major finals, after Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, who did so between Wimbledon 2011 and Roland Garros 2012.

The Serbian enjoys a slender 5-4 lead over Alcaraz, but their last clash had seen him beat Alcaraz in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open a year back.

Earlier, Alcaraz also produced a display of extraordinary resilience to outlast third seed Alexander Zverev in the record over five-hour marathon Australian Open men's singles semi-final on Friday, booking his maiden AO final after two quarterfinal finishes.

In a five-hour, 27-minute marathon inside Rod Laver Arena on Friday, Alcaraz overcame physical distress and a fierce Zverev to prevail 6-4, 7-6(5), 6-7(3), 6-7(4), 7-5 in the longest semi-final in tournament history, according to the ATP website.

The gripping encounter was the third-longest match in Australian Open history and pushed both players to their absolute limits.

The 22-year-old top seed looked firmly in control early, racing to a two-set lead with composed serving and aggressive baseline play. The Spaniard, contesting his 10th Grand Slam semi-final and his first in Melbourne, also showed remarkable nerve in the second set, clawing back from 2-5 down to edge a tense tie-break.

The contest took a dramatic turn midway through the third set when Alcaraz appeared to suffer an upper right leg issue while serving at 4-4. He required on-court treatment and visibly struggled with movement thereafter, allowing Zverev to seize momentum and drag the match into a deciding fifth set after winning the next two tie-breaks.

Zverev capitalised on Alcaraz's reduced mobility and even broke serve early in the decider. The 28-year-old German later served for the match at 5-4, having saved multiple break points, seemingly on the brink of a career-defining victory.

However, Alcaraz summoned one of the finest comebacks of his young career. Moving more freely again, the 22-year-old reeled off four consecutive games with fearless shot-making and relentless intensity, stunning Zverev and the packed arena alike. He sealed victory when Zverev's final volley dropped into the net, before collapsing to the court in sheer exhaustion and emotion.

With the win, Alcaraz became the youngest player in the Open Era to reach the final of all four Grand Slams and moved one step closer to completing a career Grand Slam.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As a tennis fan in Mumbai, I stayed up all night for this. Both semis were insane. Alcaraz's comeback from injury and 5-4 down in the fifth... that's the heart of a champion. The future is here, but Novak is still the king of Melbourne.
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Rohit P
Respectfully, I think the article focuses too much on Djokovic's age and 'big-game experience'. Sinner and Alcaraz are phenomenal talents who are pushing him to the absolute limit. The narrative should celebrate this incredible competitive era, not just one player's longevity.
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Priya S
The fitness levels are just out of this world! A 5.5-hour semi-final? My goodness. These athletes are from another planet. Makes our weekend badminton games look like child's play 😅. Can't wait for Sunday!
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Vikram M
Djokovic proving again why he's the GOAT. Saving 16 of 18 break points under that pressure is clutch. But Alcaraz... what a fighter! Reminds me of a young Nadal with that never-say-die attitude. Final is 50-50 for me.
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Michael C
Watching from Delhi. This is the dream final everyone wanted. The old master vs the young phenom. History in the making. Hope it's another five-set classic. My money's on Novak for title #25.

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