Alcaraz will never change Ferrero. Carlos is not a robot; he has a good heart and loves Ferrero. As I always say, winning isn't everything! We love you 😍🥰
IMO Joker hired Murrey to help him figure a way to beat Carlos at W19. Murrey never won AO, Joker 10x. Carlos hired an additional coach, nothing unusual. Rafa had Moya, Roig, and also added Marc Lopez.
Smart decision Carlos. Alcaraz lacks a high-quality serve in his game, which includes aces, unplayable serves, free or easy points, and gaining a strategic advantage in points. This weakness is especially evident on fast surfaces, where he often struggles against players with better serves, such as Zverev, Medvedev, Djokovic, Siner, and others. Alcaraz's serve is currently his biggest weakness and one he needs to work on. Although his height (183 cm) prevents him from serving like taller players like Roddick (188 cm), Becker (191 cm), or Ivanisevic (193 cm), he could emulate players of similar height, such as Sampras, Federer, or Nadal (whose serve was particularly effective at the 2010 US Open). Novak Djokovic has also struggled with his serve, but with the help of coaches like Becker and Ivanisevic, he has significantly improved his serve and turned it into one of his strongest weapons. Alcaraz could consider improving his serve by possibly replacing Ferrer with one of the aforementioned specialists (best option Sampras.) Until the Australian Open begins, he should focus exclusively on working on his serve, choosing one of the options listed above. Serving players of similar height could be key to Alcaraz’s further improvement.
Sorry, but what a poorly edited video.😞 It starts with the misleading title that suggests Carlos Alcaraz (aka Carlitos) has *changed* his coach. *No!* Samuel López will be *joining* Juan-Carlos Ferrero (JCF) and the rest of his team--fyi, starting in February 2025 at Rotterdam. For 9 years, he coached Spain's Pablo Carreño Busta, who is still recovering from injury that has sidelined him for months. Furthermore, López, a former coach to JCF during his playing career, is *already* based at the Ferrero Tennis Academy. Thus, he has worked with Alcaraz, esp. when JCF was unavailable--e.g. due to late 2023 surgery that kept JCF away from joining Carlitos during the 2024 Australian Open, as well as family and Academy commitments. Basically, López adds depth and more continuity and backup over the lengthy ATP Tour. Screaming, "a change that could alter his career forever" in all caps is utterly misleading.🤨 Second, when the voiceover is talking about Lopez, it shows shots, including a full picture, of Carlos Alcaraz Sr., the father or Carlitos. Finally, half of it is about Novak Djokovic, but continues to show older shots of Carlitos.🤷♀ Overall, the pictures don't match the voiceover.🙄Basically, it's *misleading clickbait*. I want my 4+ minutes back.😠
thanks for the info. typical AI generated with text to speech channels spreading misinformation. even those with millions of subscribers because people just take what they hear at face value.
Smart decision Carlos. Alcaraz lacks a high-quality serve in his game, which includes aces, unplayable serves, free or easy points, and gaining a strategic advantage in points. This weakness is especially evident on fast surfaces, where he often struggles against players with better serves, such as Zverev, Medvedev, Djokovic, Siner, and others. Alcaraz's serve is currently his biggest weakness and one he needs to work on. Although his height (183 cm) prevents him from serving like taller players like Roddick (188 cm), Becker (191 cm), or Ivanisevic (193 cm), he could emulate players of similar height, such as Sampras, Federer, or Nadal (whose serve was particularly effective at the 2010 US Open). Novak Djokovic has also struggled with his serve, but with the help of coaches like Becker and Ivanisevic, he has significantly improved his serve and turned it into one of his strongest weapons. Alcaraz could consider improving his serve by possibly replacing Ferrer with one of the aforementioned specialists (best option Sampras.) Until the Australian Open begins, he should focus exclusively on working on his serve, choosing one of the options listed above. Serving players of similar height could be key to Alcaraz’s further improvement.
@@LemLemlem-vj4cy Alcaraz so young, knows he has to keep evolving and improving, in order to keep winning slams, just look how Rafa evolved over the years. 🙄
Alcaraz didn't chage his coach. Just looked it up, and it says Lopez will JOIN alcaraz's coaching team TOGETHER with ferrero
He has changed second coach
F,,,thank you.
F,,,ing click bait.
Alcaraz will never change Ferrero. Carlos is not a robot; he has a good heart and loves Ferrero. As I always say, winning isn't everything! We love you 😍🥰
Thank you for your comment
Why was half of this video about Djokovic??? I watched to hear about Alcaraz
What can Lopez bring to Carlos' game that Juan Carlos Ferreira can not???
More bad habits
That's not true, he has other coch, he's not change Juanki
IMO Joker hired Murrey to help him figure a way to beat Carlos at W19. Murrey never won AO, Joker 10x. Carlos hired an additional coach, nothing unusual. Rafa had Moya, Roig, and also added Marc Lopez.
Smart decision Carlos. Alcaraz lacks a high-quality serve in his game, which includes aces, unplayable serves, free or easy points, and gaining a strategic advantage in points. This weakness is especially evident on fast surfaces, where he often struggles against players with better serves, such as Zverev, Medvedev, Djokovic, Siner, and others.
Alcaraz's serve is currently his biggest weakness and one he needs to work on. Although his height (183 cm) prevents him from serving like taller players like Roddick (188 cm), Becker (191 cm), or Ivanisevic (193 cm), he could emulate players of similar height, such as Sampras, Federer, or Nadal (whose serve was particularly effective at the 2010 US Open).
Novak Djokovic has also struggled with his serve, but with the help of coaches like Becker and Ivanisevic, he has significantly improved his serve and turned it into one of his strongest weapons. Alcaraz could consider improving his serve by possibly replacing Ferrer with one of the aforementioned specialists (best option Sampras.)
Until the Australian Open begins, he should focus exclusively on working on his serve, choosing one of the options listed above. Serving players of similar height could be key to Alcaraz’s further improvement.
Lot of coach changes in tennis, especially the women!
Sorry, but what a poorly edited video.😞 It starts with the misleading title that suggests Carlos Alcaraz (aka Carlitos) has *changed* his coach. *No!* Samuel López will be *joining* Juan-Carlos Ferrero (JCF) and the rest of his team--fyi, starting in February 2025 at Rotterdam. For 9 years, he coached Spain's Pablo Carreño Busta, who is still recovering from injury that has sidelined him for months. Furthermore, López, a former coach to JCF during his playing career, is *already* based at the Ferrero Tennis Academy. Thus, he has worked with Alcaraz, esp. when JCF was unavailable--e.g. due to late 2023 surgery that kept JCF away from joining Carlitos during the 2024 Australian Open, as well as family and Academy commitments. Basically, López adds depth and more continuity and backup over the lengthy ATP Tour. Screaming, "a change that could alter his career forever" in all caps is utterly misleading.🤨
Second, when the voiceover is talking about Lopez, it shows shots, including a full picture, of Carlos Alcaraz Sr., the father or Carlitos. Finally, half of it is about Novak Djokovic, but continues to show older shots of Carlitos.🤷♀ Overall, the pictures don't match the voiceover.🙄Basically, it's *misleading clickbait*. I want my 4+ minutes back.😠
Samuel Lopez is not a new coach to Alcaraz. He has filled in when JCF could not travel.
thanks for the info. typical AI generated with text to speech channels spreading misinformation. even those with millions of subscribers because people just take what they hear at face value.
That's what we meant, that he will replace him
Our goal is to report on tennis news, we pull the videos from media news and if you watch the video until the end you would understand everything.
Smart decision Carlos. Alcaraz lacks a high-quality serve in his game, which includes aces, unplayable serves, free or easy points, and gaining a strategic advantage in points. This weakness is especially evident on fast surfaces, where he often struggles against players with better serves, such as Zverev, Medvedev, Djokovic, Siner, and others.
Alcaraz's serve is currently his biggest weakness and one he needs to work on. Although his height (183 cm) prevents him from serving like taller players like Roddick (188 cm), Becker (191 cm), or Ivanisevic (193 cm), he could emulate players of similar height, such as Sampras, Federer, or Nadal (whose serve was particularly effective at the 2010 US Open).
Novak Djokovic has also struggled with his serve, but with the help of coaches like Becker and Ivanisevic, he has significantly improved his serve and turned it into one of his strongest weapons. Alcaraz could consider improving his serve by possibly replacing Ferrer with one of the aforementioned specialists (best option Sampras.)
Until the Australian Open begins, he should focus exclusively on working on his serve, choosing one of the options listed above. Serving players of similar height could be key to Alcaraz’s further improvement.
@@TennisZoneUsReplace who with who? Lopez is not replacing anyone on Carlos’ team because he already works with Carlos and has done so for many years.
Stupid news….
Casper Rudd is named as Albert Ramos….. hahaha😂 … what’s this
Alcaraz So Young Wins 4GRAND Slams He Knows How To Win More Grand Slams Don't Have To Add More Coach😂
We will see how alcaraz evolves and if the addition of this coach has helped him
@@LemLemlem-vj4cy Alcaraz so young, knows he has to keep evolving and improving, in order to keep winning slams, just look how Rafa evolved over the years. 🙄
No comment, players know better what will work for them, full stop 🛑