Key events
Third set: Paul 0-6, 1-6, 3-4 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
Gut-check time for Paul, who goes down love-30 on his serve. The American then hits a couple of winners for 30-all, before a couple of Alcaraz errors hand him the hold.
Third set: *Paul 0-6, 1-6, 3-3 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Quick hold for Alcaraz, who grabs four quick points on the trot from love-15 down.
Third set: Paul 0-6, 1-6, 3-2 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
More pressure on Paul’s serve at 30-all. But the American wins the next point behind a blistering 130mph ace that Alcaraz can’t handle, then nails down the hold with a sharply angled forehand from the baseline to win a 10-shot rally.
Third set: *Paul 0-6, 1-6, 2-2 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Alcaraz holds with four straight points from love-15, closing it out with a 128mph ace.
Third set: Paul 0-6, 1-6, 2-1 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
A rare drama-free service game for Paul, who holds at love while cracking a 132mph ace along the way.
Third set: *Paul 0-6, 1-6, 1-1 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Alcaraz strolls through another service game, pounding four winners after getting all four first serves in to hold at love in under a minute and a half.
Third set: Paul 0-6, 1-6, 1-0 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
Paul in immediate trouble after double-faulting for the first time in the match for 15-30. A forced error off the forehand by Paul then gives Alcaraz two cracks at a break point. Paul saves with the first with a backhand passing shot winner, then the second for deuce when Alcaraz ends a 10-shot rally with an unforced error off the backhand. Deuce. Alcaraz then earns a third break-point chance with a forehand winner, but fritters it away with another miss off the forehand. Deuce again. A fourth break opportunity for Alcaraz after a powerful forehand winner by the Spaniard, but Paul saves that one with a well-placed 111mph ace that Alcaraz can’t even get a racket on. Alcaraz then earns a fifth break chance but Paul saves that also with a well-constructed point. From there Paul rattles off two quick points to escape with the hold after seven and a half minutes and no fewer than five break points saved. Whew!
Alcaraz wins second set, 6-1!
Second set: Paul 0-6, 1-6 Alcaraz
Alcaraz wastes little time, rattling off three quick points for triple set point. He squanders the first with an unforced error off the forehand side, but a misfired backhand by Paul on the ensuing exchange hands Alcaraz a two-set lead after just 52 minutes.
Alcaraz breaks in sixth game of second set!
Second set: Paul 0-6, 1-5 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
More trouble for Paul on his serve. He goes down love-15, then 15-30, before digging deep to get the better of a 16-shot rally for 30-all. But Alcaraz raises his level from there, hitting a backhand winner for 30-40 and a break-point chance, then pounding a return winner that freezes Paul for a double-break advantage.
Second set: *Paul 0-6, 1-4 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Alcaraz wins four quick points from love-15 down to consolidate the break. It’s getting late early for the American.
Alcaraz breaks in fourth game of second set!
Second set: Paul 0-6, 1-3 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
More error-strewn play from Paul and he’s quickly fallen behind love-40. Three break-point chances for Alcaraz. Paul saves the first with a deft body serve that Alcaraz can’t get back into the court, but the Spaniard converts the second.
Second set: *Paul 0-6, 1-2 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
A straightforward hold at love in under two minutes for Alcaraz, who has been practically untouchable on his serve today.
Second set: Paul 0-6, 1-1 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
And Paul is on the board, finally, with a love hold, cracking a 141mph serve along the way. That would appear to be the fastest of his career.
Second set: *Paul 0-6, 0-1 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Signs of life for Paul, who grabs two points off Alcaraz’s serve for love-30. But Alcaraz rattles off four straight from there to escape with the hold.
Alcaraz wins first set, 6-0!
Alcaraz breaks in sixth game of first set!
First set: Paul 0-6 Alcaraz
Paul falls behind love-15, then 15-30, and finds himself two points from dropping this opening set. Alcaraz pushes it to deuce, continuing to give the American no quarter. Then a second deuce. Alcaraz crushes another winner for a break-point chance to win the set, but Paul erases with his first ace of the evening. An unforced error off the backhand gives Alcaraz another break-point chance and he’s able to convert it when Paul misfires off the forehand.
Alcaraz finished that set with twice as many winners (14) as unforced errors (seven), compared to five winners and 11 UFEs for Paul. One-way traffic.
First set: *Paul 0-5 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Alcaraz breezes through his third service game in a scant 76 seconds, getting all four first serves in and punctuating the love hold with a 118mph ace down the middle that freezes the American. Oh boy.
Alcaraz breaks in fourth game of first set!
First set: Paul 0-4 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
Another pressure point almost immediately for Paul at 30-all. Alcaraz sets up another break-point chance with a sizzling forehand winner for 30-40, then converts it when Paul overcooks a forehand.
First set: *Paul 0-3 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
Alcaraz needs just two minutes to back up the break with a stress-free hold. The Spaniard’s booming serves drizzled with topspin are making it difficult for Paul to get his teeth into the points.
Alcaraz breaks in second game of first set!
First set: Paul 0-2 Alcaraz* (*denotes next server)
Paul comes to net early in the point, but Alcaraz punishes a timid volley for love-15. Alcaraz then donates a couple of points on backhand unforced errors before Paul slots his first winner for 40-15. Paul crushes a 130mph first serve on the next point but misses a forehand in the rally for 40-30. Alcaraz then settles a 12-shot rally with a forehand winner for deuce. A pressure point already for Paul in his opening service game. Paul wins the next point on a forehand winner but makes another unforced error on the next point for deuce again. Another misfire off the backhand by Paul gives Alcaraz his first break-point chance of the evening, but Paul saves it behind a booming 129mph serve. Another unforced error by Paul gives Alcaraz a second look at a break but Paul saves that one, too, with a forehand winner after Alcaraz drop-shots off the kick serve. Alcaraz mints a third break-point chance when Alcaraz gets the better over an 11-shot exchange, but Paul erases it with another big serve.
Paul wins the next point but Alcaraz gets it back to deuce yet again with a brilliant topspin lob winner that paints the baseline. Yet another unforced error off the forehand side gives Alcaraz a fourth break-point opportunity and this time he converts!
It’s first blood to the Spaniard after a marathon game spanning 18 points and more than 10 minutes. Paul got 15 of 18 first serves in (83%) and saved three break points but couldn’t nail down the hold.
First set: *Paul 0-1 Alcaraz (*denotes next server)
A quick start for Alcaraz, who breezes through his opening service game and holds at love, closing with three blistering forehand winners after an unforced error by Paul off the backhand side.
Not much longer now. The players have made their entrances on to Court Philippe Chatrier for tonight’s match. We’ll be under way once they’re through their warm-ups.
Preamble
Hello and welcome to Court Philippe Chatrier for tonight’s match between Carlos Alcaraz and Tommy Paul. The Spaniard continues his title defense against the 12th-seeded American in the men’s quarter-finals on Court Philippe Chatrier in a high-stakes rematch of their Olympic quarter-final from last year, which Alcaraz won in straight sets.
The 22-year-old Spaniard leads the head-to-head 4–2 and enters the match as the clear favorite. He has a 19–1 record on clay this season, leads the ATP tour in wins (34) and titles (three), and is on an 11-match winning streak at Roland Garros. A victory today would make him the first defending men’s champion to reach the semi-finals in Paris since Rafael Nadal in 2021.
Paul is attempting to break new ground. The American has never beaten a top-10 player at a grand slam and holds an 0–4 record against top-10 opponents on clay. He is also 0–2 in his career against top-two players on this surface. But the 28-year-old has already made history this fortnight by reaching the quarter-finals on clay, grass, and hard courts. He won the boys’ title at Roland Garros a decade ago and is now chasing his second major semi-final after reaching the last four in Melbourne in 2023.
Paul and Frances Tiafoe are the first American men to reach the Roland Garros quarter-finals in the same year since 1996. Tiafoe bowed to Lorenzo Musetti earlier today. But if Paul scores the upset, he’d become the first American man to beat a top-10 opponent in Paris since Jan-Michael Gambill in 2000. No American man has reached the semi-finals here since Andre Agassi in 1999.
Alcaraz has already defeated three opponents this week, including 13th seed Ben Shelton in four sets, and has dropped only two sets in the tournament. He is bidding for a seventh career Grand Slam semi-final and his third in a row in Paris.
This will be the third meeting between Alcaraz and Paul in the past year. Alcaraz won both previous encounters, including a four-set victory at Wimbledon and a straight-sets win at the Olympics. Paul’s last win came in Toronto two years ago, when he stunned Alcaraz in the quarter-finals.
Bryan will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s a look back at today’s day session action.