The 2026 tennis season kicks off in earnest at the Australian Open on Sunday, and so too begins the third successive year when the duopoly in the men’s game’s is expected to continue.
Having split the last eight Majors evenly and taking turns to take the World No. 1 spot over the last two years, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have ushered in the sport’s new generation at such lightning-quick speed that the previous generation is fast receding in the rear-view mirror. So much so that the last remaining member of the erstwhile golden era of men’s tennis has been rendered a mere challenger.

Novak Djokovic may still be lurking around, typically unpredictable and sneakily competitive, but any upsets he lands will still be a mere asterisk in what is now quickly becoming the Sinner-Alcaraz era.
The year’s first Major at Melbourne Park will be no different. Just as they have been for the last two years, expectations are that the two leading lights will face off in another final.
Oneupmanship
The great rivalries in tennis have not only been forged in dramatic, epic contests, but also in the consistency with which those match-ups take place. Alcaraz and Sinner have certainly ensured the latter recently; they played the last three Major finals, one an all-time classic, and met again to decide the year-end ATP Finals. Each of these clashes has been followed by both players finding the kind of incremental gains that count for so much at this level.
Following losing the French Open final after holding multiple championship points, Sinner learned to be more unpredictable with his baseline strategies: taking bigger cuts on Alcaraz’s second serve and mixing up his usually metronomic baseline play. It paid heavy dividends with the Wimbledon title.
At the US Open, where Alcaraz won his sixth Major title, the Spaniard learned to de-clutter his attack-first game; vastly improved his second serve that Sinner was targeting, and becoming more ruthless to hand his opponent fewer match-turning opportunities.
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On more comfortable ground of the indoor hard courts in his home country, Sinner beat Alcaraz for the ATP Finals title in Turin by tightening his own first serve, which faltered miserably in New York. He also added even greater variety with drops, lobs and slices: a consistent theme since the summer.
So how do they one-up each other in Melbourne?
Evolution on serve is a natural progression; Alcaraz had already been seen smoothening his motion out even more during the off-season. For Sinner, those changes may come on the forehand; his reluctance to take it down the line has to be shed, and he may try to incorporate more spin as opposed to flatter speed on that side, even on hard courts.
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Outside contenders at Australian Open 2026
Can anyone other than Novak Djokovic, fourth seed and 10-time former champion, crash the Sinner-Alcaraz party?
On sheer experience and ranking, third seed Alexander Zverev deserves a mention. But he has been in indifferent form and seems further away from breaking his Grand Slam duck than he was when he was drubbed by Sinner in last year’s final at Melbourne Park.
The eighth-seeded home favourite Alex de Minaur is one to watch, as the Aussie crowd roars him on to take him past the quarterfinal stage where he has stagnated. To do that, he is likely to have to beat Alcaraz.
But the Spaniard otherwise has a pretty straightforward path to the final. It’s trickier for defending champion Sinner, who could face highly-rated Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca in the third round and has the big-serving, big-hitting lefty Ben Shelton in his quarter. Djokovic is in his half too.
Dealing with change
There will also be a role reversal of sorts. Sinner will come into Melbourne as the two-time defending champion, having proven his hard-court supremacy at the ATP Finals. While he spent all of 2025 with a target on his back – as the World No.1 with the cloud of a doping ban over him – the dust has now settled. Form and fitness are on his side, and he has even convinced his retirement-ready coach Darren Cahill to stick around a bit longer.
That is where Alcaraz will be forced to deal with turbulence. As the top seed at the Australian Open, where the Spaniard is yet to go past the quarterfinals, he is hoping to become the youngest and only the ninth man to complete the career Grand Slam (winning all four Majors).
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Normally, the 22-year-old has been just fine dealing with pressure, but this is the first Major without the guiding hand of Juan Carlos Ferrero. Last month, Alcaraz announced the end of their coaching partnership that had lasted nearly a decade. It had taken virtually everyone by surprise; rumours went around about a rift during contract re-negotiations as well as personality clashes with reference to a campy Netflix documentary. But a month later, the consensus among those in the know seems to be that it was a natural progression of Alcaraz’s career.
It is only fair that as Alcaraz goes from prodigal teenager to high-profile celebrity champion, he wishes to take greater charge of his career. The methods that worked so well when he was 16 need not work anymore, at both interpersonal and technical levels.
Regardless, his long-time collaborator will be a big miss. Especially if the World No.1, as expected, reached the business end of the tournament.





