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Tennis-With Alcaraz absent, Spanish teenager Jodar impresses on Wimbledon debut

By Thomson Reuters Jun 29, 2026 | 7:50 AM

LONDON, June 29 (Reuters) – Carlos Alcaraz is back home nursing a wrist injury and retired great Rafa Nadal might be lounging on his boat off the coast of Mallorca but Spain has yet ​another Wimbledon contender in the shape of powerful teenager Rafael ‌Jodar.

The 19-year-old made his main draw debut at the All England Club on Monday and looked immediately at home in his first professional match on a grass court as he eased to a 6-3 6-3 7-5 victory over British wildcard Felix Gill.

Facing a callow ‌Spaniard ​in the first match on a lush Court ⁠Three might have been seen ⁠as an opportunity for 220th-ranked Gill to cause an upset against the 23rd seed.

But that never looked remotely likely as Jodar emulated two-time Wimbledon champions Alcaraz and Nadal by reaching the second round as a ​teenaged debutant.

“It was a very tough match and Felix played very well,” Jodar said on court. “I feel my game is very good on this ⁠surface even though I haven’t played much on ⁠it, so I need to get used to it. ​That’s why I came early to Wimbledon to have a few more days. ​Now it’s on to the second match.”

Ranked around 500 in the ‌world a year ago, the 6ft 3in Jodar has rocketed up the rankings since and announced himself on the big stage by reaching the French Open quarter-finals this year on his debut, having won his first ATP title ⁠in Marrakech.

While Spanish players used to be renowned as claycourt warriors whose weapons were rendered harmless on the lawns, Nadal and then Alcaraz changed all that.

With a ⁠hugely powerful baseline game, ‌a potent serve and an ability to mix it ⁠up, Jodar showed he will be a threat in ​a ‌dominant display against the willing Gill.

Only when he went ​a break ⁠down early in the third set did it look as though he might get dragged into a duel, but he quickly found another gear, breaking back twice to wrap up a quick win.

Jodar’s next assignment promised to be a tougher one against vastly experienced fellow Spaniard Pablo Carreno Busta.

(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing ​by Alison Williams)