ATP Buenos Aires, Argentina

Nicolas Jarry surprises Carlos Alcaraz in Buenos Aires semifinals for biggest win of career

The Chilean has now won four of his last seven matches against Top 5 players, a run that dates back to last May.



A red-hot Nicolas Jarry pulled off the biggest win of his career on Saturday night, taking out No. 2-ranked Carlos Alcaraz in the semifinals of the clay-court event in Buenos Aires, 7-6 (2), 6-3.

The big-hitting Chilean’s previous-best win came against a No. 3-ranked Alexander Zverev in Barcelona five years ago.

It was also his first win in three attempts against Alcaraz.

“Third time lucky one,” he said in his on-court interview after the match. “Carlos is one of the best players, so this means a lot to me.”

Jarry is now 5-8 in his career against Top 5 players, but he’s won four of his last seven matches against the elite, a stretch that dates back nine months to the tail end of last year’s clay-court season.

NICOLAS JARRY VS TOP 5 PLAYERS (5-8):
d. No. 3 Zverev in 2019 Barcelona 2nd Rd
l. to No. 5 Zverev in 2019 Geneva F
l. to No. 5 Zverev in 2019 Hamburg 1st Rd
l. to No. 2 Ruud in 2022 Seoul 2nd Rd
l. to No. 2 Alcaraz in 2023 Rio de Janeiro SFs
l. to No. 3 Tsitsipas in 2023 Monte Carlo 3rd Rd
d. No. 4 Ruud in 2023 Geneva QFs
l. to No. 4 Ruud in 2023 Roland Garros 4th Rd
d. No. 5 Tsitsipas in 2023 Halle 2nd Rd
l. to No. 1 Alcaraz in 2023 Wimbledon 3rd Rd
l. to No. 5 Tsitsipas in 2023 Los Cabos QFs
d. No. 5 Tsitsipas in 2023 Beijing 1st Rd
d. No. 2 Alcaraz in 2023 Buenos Aires SFs

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 15: Nicolas Jarry of Chile reacts in their round one singles match against Flavio Cobolli of Italy during the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 15, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)
© 2024 Getty Images

Alcaraz had won both of the pair’s previous meetings, both last year, on clay in the semifinals of Rio de Janeiro (6-7 (2), 7-5, 6-0) and on grass in the third round of Wimbledon (6-3, 6-7 (6), 6-3, 7-5).

And he came out strong this time, too, holding his first four service games to love—but Jarry stayed with him throughout the first set, then stormed through the tie-break. Then, after Alcaraz broke in the first game of the second set, Jarry broke right back, and ultimately grabbed another break for 5-3 in the second set before serving it out.

“After the battles that I’ve had a couple days ago, this was very tough physically,” said Jarry, whose week has also included battling to the 100th tour-level win of his career against Stan Wawrinka.

“I’m so extremely happy to be able to come back. I didn’t start very well today. I couldn’t win a couple of points with his serve. But I was able to come back little by little, so I’m happy for that.”

Awaiting the No. 3-seeded Jarry in Sunday’s final will be Argentinian wild card Facundo Diaz Acosta, who beat countryman Federico Coria in the first semifinal of the day, 6-2, 6-3. It’ll be Jarry and Diaz Acosta's first tour-level meeting—the Chilean has won all three of their meetings below tour-level, but all of them went to three sets.