Wednesday, March 04, 2026 | Ramadan 14, 1447 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
22°C / 22°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI
x
Day 5: Latest developments in the war
Oil traffic through Strait of Hormuz down 90%: Kpler
Missiles: Oman rescues crew of Malta-flagged ship
Iranian warship sinks off Sri Lanka, bodies recovered at sea
Oman Crude trades at $85.93 amid war escalation
Bus-flight combo comes to the rescue of stranded passengers
Iran claims complete control of the Hormuz Strait
Drone downed near Baghdad airport: Reports
State funeral for Ayatollah Khamenei to begin Wednesday evening
11-year-old succumbs to shrapnel wound in Kuwait

Alcaraz ready to extend unbeaten run at Indian Wells

 Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) speaks to the media at a news conference during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden
Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) speaks to the media at a news conference during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden
minus
plus

 


Indian Wells, United States: World number one Carlos Alcaraz believes controlling his emotions has been the secret of his unbeaten start to 2026 as he chases a third title of the year at Indian Wells.


The 22-year-old Spanish star made history in Melbourne last month with victory at the Australian Open, becoming the youngest man ever to complete a career Grand Slam.


He followed that up by pocketing the Qatar Open and arrives in California on the back of 12 straight wins since the turn of the year.


Alcaraz, who is targeting a third Indian Wells title after wins in 2023 and 2024, says he is not dwelling on Novak Djokovic's record 41-match winning streak from 2011.


"Obviously I know that 41, Novak holds the record," Alcaraz told reporters on Tuesday. "You don't realize how difficult it is until you're chasing that.


"When you're on 12 wins, it's like (winning) four or five more tournaments, the biggest tournaments in the world. You realize...how impressive it is."


Alcaraz, who has already amassed seven Grand Slam titles, puts his recent success down to learning to keep his temperament in check.


"I think on the court I just I control my emotions even better," Alcaraz said.


"I would say that was the key of, you know, the good level of tennis that I have been playing lately...I just control myself, and in a calm place I can find the solutions and I can go through.


"When I was getting mad or when I was playing bad or whatever, I just found the right way again, because I was calm."


 



SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon