Nitto ATP Finals - Carlos Alcaraz - Tennis racket






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The item will be shipped with certified shipping (with tracking number). Good protection will be used to prevent the lot from being damaged.
Great collectible item by one of the best tennis players of the moment.
HEAD tennis racket signed by one of the top players of the moment, Carlos Alcaraz. Autograph obtained before one of the training sessions for the Nitto ATP Finals. There is a photograph of the autograph moment. The highest bidder will win the video of Sinner signing the racket.
Alcaraz is a Spanish professional tennis player, currently ranked number 1 in the ATP rankings. He is a two-time Wimbledon champion and the reigning champion of Roland Garros and the United States Open.
As a youth, he won two ITF World Tennis Tour Juniors tournaments and reached number twenty-two in the rankings. He turned professional in 2018, winning three ITF World Tennis Tour tournaments and four ATP Challenger Tour events, entering the top 100 of the ATP rankings in May 2021. Two months later, he won his first ATP Tour 250 event, the Croatia Open. In February 2022, he claimed his first ATP Tour 500 title at the Rio de Janeiro Open, and in April, his first ATP Tour Masters 1000 at the Miami Open. In September of the same year, he won his first Grand Slam by defeating Casper Ruud in the US Open final, becoming the youngest player in history to reach number one in the ATP world rankings at just 19 years and 18 weeks old. Alcaraz finished the year as world number 1 for the first time in his career, becoming the youngest man to achieve this.
He has achieved several records in Grand Slam tournaments, is the youngest tennis player in history to win a Grand Slam on three different surfaces, the seventh (during the open era) to win his first three finals, the sixth to win Roland Garros and Wimbledon in the same year (being the youngest), and is the first player in history to win his first final on clay (Roland Garros 2024), grass (Wimbledon 2023), and hard court (US Open 2022). He is the second-best Spanish player in individual Grand Slam titles, only behind Rafael Nadal, with 22. At the 2025 Roland Garros tournament, he defeated Jannik Sinner in the longest final in the tournament's history (5 hours and 29 minutes), setting several records; the first tennis player to come back from 0-2 and three match points down in a Grand Slam final since 1927 (Henri Cochet at Wimbledon), the third to win two Grand Slams, saving a match point during the tournament (US Open 2022 and Roland Garros 2025, both against Sinner), after Rod Laver (Australia 1960 and Roland Garros 1962) and Novak Djokovic (US Open 2011 and Wimbledon 2019), and the second to win his first five Grand Slam finals, after Roger Federer. Following his victory at the 2025 US Open, he became the fourth man in the Open era to win more than two Grand Slams on three different surfaces, after Mats Wilander, Nadal, and Djokovic. He is the second youngest (22 years and 125 days) to win his sixth Grand Slam, only behind Björn Borg (22 years and 32 days), returning to the number 1 ranking for the first time since September 2023.
At the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, he became the youngest player (21 years and 89 days) to qualify for an Olympic singles tennis final since Seoul 1988, winning the silver medal after losing to Novak Djokovic 7-6 (7-3) and 7-6 (7-2) in his first participation. For many media outlets and experts, it was one of the best Olympic finals in history. In October of the same year and in 2025, he participated in the 6 Kings Slam, an exhibition tournament held in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) that brought together six of the top players on the circuit. Alcaraz reached the final in both editions, where he was defeated by Jannik Sinner. For his participation, he received 1.5 million dollars, while the champion took home a total of 6 million, making the event one of the most financially lucrative in tennis history.
He currently resides in his hometown of El Palmar (Murcia), and is trained in Villena, in the province of Alicante, by the Spanish former tennis player Juan Carlos Ferrero.
The item will be shipped with certified shipping (with tracking number). Good protection will be used to prevent the lot from being damaged.
Great collectible item by one of the best tennis players of the moment.
HEAD tennis racket signed by one of the top players of the moment, Carlos Alcaraz. Autograph obtained before one of the training sessions for the Nitto ATP Finals. There is a photograph of the autograph moment. The highest bidder will win the video of Sinner signing the racket.
Alcaraz is a Spanish professional tennis player, currently ranked number 1 in the ATP rankings. He is a two-time Wimbledon champion and the reigning champion of Roland Garros and the United States Open.
As a youth, he won two ITF World Tennis Tour Juniors tournaments and reached number twenty-two in the rankings. He turned professional in 2018, winning three ITF World Tennis Tour tournaments and four ATP Challenger Tour events, entering the top 100 of the ATP rankings in May 2021. Two months later, he won his first ATP Tour 250 event, the Croatia Open. In February 2022, he claimed his first ATP Tour 500 title at the Rio de Janeiro Open, and in April, his first ATP Tour Masters 1000 at the Miami Open. In September of the same year, he won his first Grand Slam by defeating Casper Ruud in the US Open final, becoming the youngest player in history to reach number one in the ATP world rankings at just 19 years and 18 weeks old. Alcaraz finished the year as world number 1 for the first time in his career, becoming the youngest man to achieve this.
He has achieved several records in Grand Slam tournaments, is the youngest tennis player in history to win a Grand Slam on three different surfaces, the seventh (during the open era) to win his first three finals, the sixth to win Roland Garros and Wimbledon in the same year (being the youngest), and is the first player in history to win his first final on clay (Roland Garros 2024), grass (Wimbledon 2023), and hard court (US Open 2022). He is the second-best Spanish player in individual Grand Slam titles, only behind Rafael Nadal, with 22. At the 2025 Roland Garros tournament, he defeated Jannik Sinner in the longest final in the tournament's history (5 hours and 29 minutes), setting several records; the first tennis player to come back from 0-2 and three match points down in a Grand Slam final since 1927 (Henri Cochet at Wimbledon), the third to win two Grand Slams, saving a match point during the tournament (US Open 2022 and Roland Garros 2025, both against Sinner), after Rod Laver (Australia 1960 and Roland Garros 1962) and Novak Djokovic (US Open 2011 and Wimbledon 2019), and the second to win his first five Grand Slam finals, after Roger Federer. Following his victory at the 2025 US Open, he became the fourth man in the Open era to win more than two Grand Slams on three different surfaces, after Mats Wilander, Nadal, and Djokovic. He is the second youngest (22 years and 125 days) to win his sixth Grand Slam, only behind Björn Borg (22 years and 32 days), returning to the number 1 ranking for the first time since September 2023.
At the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, he became the youngest player (21 years and 89 days) to qualify for an Olympic singles tennis final since Seoul 1988, winning the silver medal after losing to Novak Djokovic 7-6 (7-3) and 7-6 (7-2) in his first participation. For many media outlets and experts, it was one of the best Olympic finals in history. In October of the same year and in 2025, he participated in the 6 Kings Slam, an exhibition tournament held in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) that brought together six of the top players on the circuit. Alcaraz reached the final in both editions, where he was defeated by Jannik Sinner. For his participation, he received 1.5 million dollars, while the champion took home a total of 6 million, making the event one of the most financially lucrative in tennis history.
He currently resides in his hometown of El Palmar (Murcia), and is trained in Villena, in the province of Alicante, by the Spanish former tennis player Juan Carlos Ferrero.
