Daniil Medvedev Shocks the World, Ends Carlos Alcaraz’s Perfect 2026 Season At Indian Wells

Daniil Medvedev hits a shot against Carlos Alcaraz

Nobody told Daniil Medvedev that he wasn’t supposed to win this one. The tennis world had already penciled in a dream Indian Wells final — Carlos Alcaraz versus Jannik Sinner, the two young kings of the sport going at it under the California sun. It was supposed to be a coronation. A celebration. A “Sincaraz” showdown that had fans buzzing all week.

Medvedev didn’t get the memo. The Russian 30-year-old walked onto Stadium 1 on Saturday and dismantled the world’s best player with ruthless, calculated precision, beating Alcaraz 6-3, 7-6(3) to snap the Spaniard’s flawless 16-0 start to the 2026 season. Just like that, the party Alcaraz had been throwing all year was over. Medvedev was the one turning off the lights.

How Medvedev Took Control From the Start

From the very first game, Medvedev looked like a man on a mission. Alcaraz, who came into this match having already won the Australian Open and the ATP 500 event in Doha, was broken from 40-15 up in the fourth game of the opening set. He had two free points to hold serve and stay level. He didn’t use either of them.

Errors sprayed off his racquet. His coach stared into the middle distance. And Medvedev, stone-faced and relentless, held his nerve and served out the first set in just over half an hour. In a season where Alcaraz had looked untouchable, this was jarring. Almost uncomfortable to watch. Like seeing a Lamborghini sputter at a red light.

The Second Set: Alcaraz Fights, Medvedev Doesn’t Flinch

To his credit, Alcaraz came out swinging in the second set. He got the first break and briefly looked like the guy who had steamrolled through the draw all year. His team was animated in his corner. The crowd, which had clearly shown up expecting a different outcome, started to believe again.

But Medvedev doesn’t panic. He broke straight back. Then, at 4-3, Alcaraz couldn’t convert a break point that could have changed everything. Medvedev stayed level, saved two set points at 5-6, and pushed the set to a tiebreak.

That’s where it got ugly — for Alcaraz, anyway. Two consecutive balls into the net on his own serve handed Medvedev a 4-1 lead in the breaker. Another error, and they changed ends with Medvedev up 5-1.

Alcaraz saved one match point with an ace, but Medvedev sealed it on his third opportunity, firing an ace of his own to close out the match.

What This Win Means

Let’s not gloss over how significant this result is. Medvedev just beat the hottest player on the planet, in straight sets, without dropping a set the entire tournament. He came in as the No. 11 seed and put together arguably the most commanding performance of his season.

This is also personal. Medvedev lost to Alcaraz in the Indian Wells final in both 2023 and 2024. Two consecutive finals, two consecutive losses, at the same tournament, to the same guy. That kind of thing stays with you. Saturday felt like a man settling a score.

He now heads into Sunday’s final against Jannik Sinner for his third BNP Paribas Open title match.

Alcaraz’s Record Run Comes To An End

For Alcaraz, the loss stings, but context matters. He came into Indian Wells having completed a career Grand Slam at the Australian Open at just 22 years old. He had been chasing Novak Djokovic’s legendary 41-0 start to the 2011 season, and while that dream is officially dead, the bigger picture still looks very bright for the Spaniard.

He waved to the fans as he left the court, and will now shift his focus to the Miami Open, where he is a former champion.

But Saturday belonged to Medvedev. Fully and completely. Sometimes the plot twist is the best part of the story.