The 2026 Miami Open, one of the premier ATP Masters 1000 events held at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, from March 18-29, was expected to showcase Carlos Alcaraz’s dominance following his career-defining Australian Open triumph earlier in the year. The 22-year-old Spaniard, ranked World No. 1 and fresh off completing the Career Grand Slam with his AO win over Novak Djokovic, had started the season scorching hot: 17-1 heading into Miami after titles in Doha and the AO itself. Yet, the Sunshine Double’s hard courts proved unforgiving once again.

In the third round on Sunday, March 22, Alcaraz faced 25-year-old American Sebastian Korda, seeded No. 32 and ranked around No. 36. Korda, playing in his home state with raucous crowd support, delivered the performance of his career. The match unfolded as a gripping three-set battle: Korda took the first set 6-3 with aggressive baseline play, sharp serving, and clever serve-and-volley tactics that disrupted Alcaraz’s rhythm. Alcaraz fought back fiercely in the second, saving set points when Korda served for the match at 5-4, then breaking twice to level at one set all (7-5).
The decider saw Korda regain composure, breaking for 5-3 and closing out 6-4 on an unreturnable serve after 2 hours and 19 minutes. The final score: 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. For Korda, it marked his first-ever win over a World No. 1 and the biggest victory of his career. He praised Alcaraz post-match: “He’s unbelievable in every aspect—movement, volleys, forehand, backhand. There’s nothing he can’t do,” while crediting his own “soul-searching” after nearly blowing the lead.

Alcaraz, visibly frustrated throughout, had heated exchanges with his coach Juan Carlos Ferrero (or team members like Samuel Lopez in some reports), shouting phrases like “I can’t do any more!” and even “I’m going home!” during tense moments. These outbursts, captured on camera, fueled speculation about his mental state amid the mounting pressure of being the top seed.
In the post-match press conference, Alcaraz appeared subdued and self-critical. He credited Korda’s “incredible” level, admitting, “There were a lot of tight moments—30-all, 40-all, advantage—where I just didn’t make it. But he played such great points.” His initial comments suggested deep disappointment: acknowledging letting down his support system and lacking excuses for failing to seize key opportunities. Fans online interpreted this as a vulnerable moment from the usually upbeat star, with many expressing concern over his recent dip—his second straight early Miami exit after last year’s second-round loss to David Goffin.
Then came the twist. Moments after Alcaraz’s remarks, his coach (amid team discussions leaked via media and on-court mics) revealed a key detail that reframed everything: Alcaraz had been dealing with lingering physical fatigue and minor discomfort from the grueling Indian Wells semifinal loss to Daniil Medvedev just days earlier. Reports indicated the quick turnaround between the two Masters events—combined with the physical toll of his AO title run—left him not fully recovered. The coach emphasized that Alcaraz pushed through despite not being at 100%, refusing medical timeouts or excuses during play.
This revelation shifted the narrative from “Alcaraz choked” or “lost focus” to one of resilience under suboptimal conditions. Suddenly, his self-criticism appeared overly harsh, and praise poured in for his fighting spirit—he battled back from the brink in the second set and never quit.
The tennis world exploded with reactions. Social media buzzed with debates: Was Alcaraz too hard on himself? Did the schedule need rethinking for top players? Korda’s win was celebrated as a breakthrough for American tennis, while Alcaraz’s team quickly clarified he planned a short rest at home with family before clay season prep. Alcaraz himself later posted positively: “Still in the right way. Clay is coming—excited!” hinting at optimism.
This upset highlighted broader themes in 2026 tennis: the brutal demands of the early hard-court swing, the rising competitiveness (Korda joined a list of players stunning top seeds), and Alcaraz’s maturity in handling adversity. Despite the loss dropping his season record to 17-2, experts noted his process remained strong—he was competitive in tight moments against a player who “deserved it,” as Alcaraz graciously admitted.
As the Miami Open continues without its top seed, eyes turn to the clay swing starting with Monte-Carlo in April. For Alcaraz, this “shocking detail” from his coach turned a potential low point into fuel for redemption. The tennis world isn’t reeling from defeat—it’s buzzing with anticipation for his inevitable bounce-back.