Carlos Alcaraz was born in El Palmar, Murcia, in 2003 and raised inside Juan Carlos Ferrero's Equelite academy, turning pro as a teenager and tearing through the Challenger circuit faster than the tour's scouting could keep up. The Spanish lineage is unmistakable — a heavy, late-breaking forehand and the foot speed to defend deep behind the baseline — but the modern wrinkle is the drop shot, the best of his generation, and a willingness to follow it forward that most baseliners his age never build.
What separates him is range. He grinds from the back when the rally demands it, shortens points at net when it doesn't, and re-tunes that balance across clay, grass, and hard courts better than anyone in the current top tier. The volatility is real — the same flair that produces a winner from nowhere can spill into stretches of unforced errors — but the ceiling is the highest the men's game has seen since the Big Three's peak.
The résumé arrived early and fast. He broke through at the 2022 US Open to become the youngest world No. 1 in ATP history, then stacked majors across every surface to complete the Career Slam at 22. His defining rivalry is with Jannik Sinner — the two have carved the sport's marquee matches between them — and his ledger also runs through Novak Djokovic, whom he beat in a Wimbledon final, and clay-court tests against the likes of Alexander Zverev and Lorenzo Musetti.
He enters this stretch ranked No. 2, having recently closed out the Career Slam — the headline that frames everything else. The week-to-week swings of the Italian Open and French Open live in the daily form notes; the constant is that any draw he's in runs through him.