MELBOURNE, Australia — Carlos Alcaraz acknowledged that while he won the third-round match, he lost the battle of the drop shots against Corentin Moutet.
That could be a first for the 22-year-old Spaniard, who grew up relentlessly practicing his drop shots and is now at the Australian Open chasing a career Grand Slam.
The left-handed Moutet mixed things up for Alcaraz in an almost festival Friday vibe on Rod Laver Arena, his blend of drop shots, slice, tweeners, half-volleys, angled volleys and even an underarm serve keeping the world's No. 1-ranked player on his toes.
The 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 win over the No. 32 seed appeared like a fairly convincing scoreline, but the match was anything but routine.
''When you play someone like Corentin you don't know what's going to be next,'' Alcaraz said in his on-court TV interview. ''I had so much fun on the court. As you could see, we both pulled off great shots. Great points.''
Alcaraz laughed when he reflected on his surprise near the end of the first set, when he was fed up with tracking down drop shots and told his support team ''I'm not going to run to get those.''
''I was tired to go forward to the net,'' he said. ''I thought we were in a drop-shot competition, but he won!''
There were moments of tension, of course, such as in the second set when Alcaraz surrendered a 3-0 lead when the 26-year-old Frenchman went on a four-game roll.