NEW YORK. – Carlos Alcaraz has surrendered the No. 1 world ranking but got his US Open title defense off to an easy start as injured German Dominik Koepfer retired against the 20-year-old top seed on Tuesday.
The season’s final Grand Slam began on Monday with a change at the top after Novak Djokovic demolished Frenchman Alexandre Muller to ease into the second round– a result that meant the Serb will replace Alcaraz as world No. 1 when the rankings are updated on Sept. 11.
But Alcaraz will have the No. 1 attached to his name for the duration of the Flushing Meadows fortnight and advanced to the second round after Koepfer twisted his ankle minutes into the match and later retired with the Spaniard up 6-2, 3-2.
Alcaraz, bidding to become the first man to retain his US Open crown since Roger Federer won five straight from 2004 to 2008, appeared unsteady at times on the North American hardcourts ahead of the season’s final Grand Slam but kept his composure on Tuesday with few errors.
“I’m not thinking about defending the title. I was not thinking about being the champion last year,” he told reporters.
“I just focus on playing my best level, to recover the level that I played last year, and try to do the same things that I did last year. That’s the only thing that I’m thinking about right now.”
With Alcaraz and Djokovic hogging the spotlight, Daniil Medvedev had been the forgotten man, but the third seeded Russian remains a threat to claim his second US Open title in three years.
He got everyone’s attention when he dispatched Hungarian Attila Balazs 6-1, 6-1, 6-0 in a speedy affair to kick off the action on Arthur Ashe Stadium, firing off 41 winners to set up a second-round meeting with Australian Christopher O’Connell.
Andy Murray, the 2012 US Open champion, recorded a landmark 200th Grand Slam match win as he turned back the clock to beat young Frenchman Corentin Moutet 6-2, 7-5, 6-3.
The 36-year-old Scotsman said he was playing some of the best tennis on a consistent level since 2017. He faces Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov in the second round.
Italian sixth seed Jannik Sinner handily beat German Yannick Hanfmann 6-3, 6-1, 6-1 and will play compatriot Lorenzo Sonego next.