By Richard Pagliaro | @Tennis_Now | Friday, November 17, 2023
The Turin baseline is a generational crossroads.
The ATP Finals semifinal showdown pits veteran champions and rising younger stars pushing to supplant them atop the game.
More: Alcaraz Sweeps Into Djokovic Rematch in Turin
Twenty-year-old Carlos Alcaraz faces world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in a single semifinal, and 22-year-old house hero Jannik Sinner performs 27-year-old Daniil Medvedev in a bid to grow to be the primary Italian man to achieve the singles ultimate within the 54-year event historical past.
Asked to evaluate the evolution of the game, Medvedev cited 5 “super young” stars he envisions battling for the highest spot sooner or later: No. 2 Alcaraz, No. 4 Sinner, 20-year-old Holger Rune, US Open semifinalist Ben Shelton and 19-year-old Frenchman Arthur Fils.
“For sure right now we can call them Next Gen. I mean, they’re already here, but they’re still super young,” Medvedev advised the media in Turin after bowing to Alcaraz 6-4, 6-4. “Jannik, Holger and Carlos at this moment at the top. For sure Ben Shelton, Arthur Fils, guys like this, they can also come there.
“I think because they’re at the top, there is not much difference between me, even Novak, and them. The difference is that Novak has 24 Grand Slams. When they play one on one, as we saw, he can lose. So there is not much different.”
Wimbledon winner Alcaraz made his mark because the youngest year-end No. 1 in ATP historical past final 12 months.
World No. 2 Alcaraz is the youngest man within the Turin discipline,which confirmed the power of this youth motion. With 20-year-old skills Alcaraz and Rune within the discipline it marked the primary time for the reason that 2000 Lisbon ATP Finals—Lleyton Hewitt (19) and Marat Safin (20)—there are two 20-and-under gamers within the discipline.
Hall of Famer John McEnroe has referred to as Alcaraz essentially the most full 20-year-old champion he’s ever seen.
The third-ranked Medvedev says this NextGen star class personal extra mature video games than he did on the similar age—although whether or not they can present the identical endurance stays to be seen.
“If I compare to myself, the difference is I started playing top tennis maybe at 23, I think I was. 2019,” Medvedev stated. “They started doing it at, like, 19. Pretty impressive.
“At 19 I was probably 600 in the world. That’s impressive. That’s also why I like my journey. I was not like them. I had to slowly, slowly dig my way up. Now I’m here and I’m really happy.”
Photo credit score: Matthew Calvis
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