Coach Patrick Mouratoglou and Australian player Nick Kyrgios discussed Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz's tennis with the prime Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. While Mouratoglou sided with the new generation players for their speed, Kyrgios backed the luminaries.
Patrick Mouratoglou, who has been coaching Naomi Osaka since 2024 and served as the legendary Serena Williams' coach from 2012 to 2022, has often shared his views on players and everything tennis. He recently sat with the 2022 Wimbledon finalist, Kyrgios, on the UTS Tour talk show to discuss their careers and opine on the top-ranked players, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz.
Osaka's coach felt that the era of Sinner and Alcaraz is more fast-paced than the time when Nadal and Federer dominated.
"Generally speaking, I think the game as the game keeps evolving, and I think as I told you, I watched the final of Roland Garros and you did and then I saw the final of on grass Federer and Nadal is so much slower. It is really slower. They play slower. The pace they play is unreal. Unreal." (beginning 27:00)Kyrgios, on the other hand, disagreed with the French and revealed that the World No. 1 and 2 will need a significant time to match prime Federer and Nadal.
"I think they'll eventually surpass them, but not right now. I don't think they're playing a level now. Not quite."Mouratoglou then amended his diction and refused to compare eras while also agreeing that Nadal on the clay in his prime is for the history books.
Patrick Mouratoglou silenced John McEnroe's claim that Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz beat Nadal on clay

Patrick Mouratoglou once differed from the legendary John McEnroe when the latter claimed that Sinner and Alcaraz can defeat Nadal, the 'King of Clay', in his signature tournament. He felt that the Spaniard's mastery on clay, which earned him 14 titles, would be hard to contest.
"I don't think that Alcaraz or Sinner would be favorites against Nadal in Roland-Garros because Nadal has a game so different from everybody else, so adapted to clay. I don't know how would they deal with that. So that's why I don't think they can say that. There's no way we can know and considering that this guy won 14 Roland-Garros, it's difficult to think that the year after any of the two finalist would beat him."Sinner and Alcaraz went head-on again in the 2025 Wimbledon finals, and the former trounced the Spaniard in three sets to claim his maiden title in London.
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Edited by Agnijeeta Majumder