I watched it all.
The Joker had no answers.
https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/articles/c51y2vn643yo4 hours ago
Did anyone expect that?
Carlos Alcaraz's victory over Novak Djokovic in the Wimbledon final may not have been a huge surprise, but the way it played out certainly was.
In the build-up, there was talk of a repeat of last year's final - an almighty tussle that went the full five sets. And when the first game of the match lasted 14 minutes, with Djokovic eventually surrendering his serve, many felt it would be more of the same.
But Alcaraz flipped the script, racing through the first two sets, taking advantage of an off-colour Djokovic and never allowing the 24-time major champion to raise his level as he won
6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-4).
"It was an annihilation. Alcaraz was phenomenal," former British number one Tim Henman said on BBC TV.
"The tone was set in the first game. Alcaraz was relentless and gave Djokovic nothing to get his teeth stuck into.
"Alcaraz always had the answers. The first set wasn't even close. When he needed it most in the tie-break, it was like Djokovic blinked."
Former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash said it was "a perfect performance", describing it as a "breathtaking type of tennis on the biggest stage there is".
At 21, Alcaraz is a four-time major champion, and has won the French Open and Wimbledon in the space of five weeks.
"Alcaraz will carry our sport a long way," said Nick Kyrgios - runner-up at Wimbledon in 2022.
"The biggest enemy he'll have is his body. How healthy can he stay?
"I think he'll have upwards of 15 Slams, for sure."