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Carlos Alcaraz needed just under two hours to dismiss No. 60 Miomir Kecmanovic 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 under the lights on Rod Laver Arena on Monday—and set up a mouthwatering quarterfinal rematch with No. 6 seed Alexander Zverev.

The two-time Grand Slam winner moved into the last eight at the Australian Open for the first time as he barraged 43 winners including five aces against Kecmanovic in a power-hitting masterclass.

“I pushed him to the limit in every shot and every point,” Alcaraz said in his on-court interview. “I know he has played a lot of matches in five sets and a lot of tough matches before this one. Probably physically he wasn’t at his 100 percent, and every ball I was pushing him to the limit and moving him side to side.

“I could take my chances in every set, and I think it was a pretty good match from my side.”

“I pushed him to the limit in every shot and every point,” Alcaraz said after his 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 victory over Kecmanovic.

“I pushed him to the limit in every shot and every point,” Alcaraz said after his 6-4, 6-4, 6-0 victory over Kecmanovic.

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With the victory, Alcaraz also completes the Grand Slam set having reached the quarterfinals at every major at least once. It’s a full-circle moment after he made his Grand Slam main draw debut in Melbourne as a 17-year-old qualifier at the 2021 edition.

Up next, Alcaraz gets the resurgent Zverev after the German ousted No. 19 seed Cameron Norrie in a dramatic final-set tiebreak 7-5, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (10-3) on Margaret Court Arena earlier in the day.

Zverev leads the pair’s rivalry 4-3, and he’ll get an extra confidence boost going into their first meeting of the year having closed out the 2023 season with a 6-7 (3), 6-3, 6-4 round robin victory over Alcaraz at the Nitto ATP Finals.

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They’ve split their last two Grand Slam meetings as well—both in the quarterfinal stage, too—with Zverev toppling Alcaraz in four sets at 2022 Roland Garros and the Spaniard claiming his revenge a year later at the US Open in straight sets.

“I think if I play at this level, I will have my chances,” Alcaraz said. “Obviously, I saw he has played tough five sets as well, a tiebreak in the fifth set. I think it will be tough for him as well…

“I hope to play a really tough match against him. I love to play against Sascha, we always bring a high intensity and high level of tennis and I think for the crowd as well it will be a great match.”

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Alcaraz displayed his highest level of the year against Kecmanovic, who took out No. 14 seed Tommy Paul 6-4, 3-6, 2-6, 7-6 (7), 6-0 in the previous round. Only one break of serve made the difference in each of the first two high-quality sets, as Kecmanovic stayed toe-to-toe with Alcaraz at the outset—before the Spaniard picked up the pace in the third set.

But despite a stern test from the 24-year-old Serbian, he never truly looked in danger as his powerful serve left Kecmanovic very few opportunities to attack: Alcaraz didn’t face a single break point in any of three sets, and won 83 percent of points (39/47) behind his first serve.

“What was working for you tonight in this match?” Jim Courier asked him in their post-match interview. “Well, I think everything,” responded Alcaraz, cueing laughter from the stands. “I did everything perfectly.”