Australian wheelchair tennis champion Dylan Alcott has secured an unprecedented men's Golden Slam tennis sweep after winning the US Open Quad title.
Key points:
- The achievement means he has won all four Grand Slams and a Paralympic Games gold medal
- He secured the feat with a straight sets win over Niels Vink in the US Open
- Diede De Groot of the Netherlands clinched the women's Golden Slam
The Golden Slam takes in his Australian, French, Wimbledon and now US Open Championships, together with his gold medal from the Tokyo Paralympic Games.
Alcott defeated Dutchman Niels Vink in straight sets at Flushing Meadows, 7-5, 6-2.
"I can't believe I just won the Golden Slam," Alcott said following his win.
"I used to hate myself so much, I hated my disability, I didn't even want to be here any more.
"I found tennis and it changed and saved my life.
"Now I've become the only male ever in any form of tennis to win the Golden Slam which is pretty cool."
He thanked the organisers for "putting us on stadium courts, changing my life, changing Niels's life, and giving disabled people a platform."
Alcott celebrated with supporters, then turned up next door at the Arthur Ashe Stadium to watch the men's singles final between Novak Djokovic and Daniil Medvedev.
As the cameras pointed at him in the stands, the Australian opened a can of beer, poured it in his US Open trophy and drank, then tipped the trophy on top of his head, prompting big cheers from the Flushing Meadows crowd.
The match immediately prior to Alcott's, saw women's tennis champ Diede De Groot of the Netherlands clinch the women's Golden Slam in New York.
She beat Yui Jamiji of Japan 6-3, 6-2 to win the US Open wheelchair women's singles (open division) title.
DeGroot was the first tennis player to win all four major titles plus a gold medal in the same year since Steffi Graf in 1988.
'He's achieved what he wanted to achieve'
Alcott's dad, Martin, said his son was not planning to compete at the next Paralympics, but hopefully would play the Australian Open next year.
"No more Paralympics," he told Raf Epstein on ABC Radio Melbourne.
"My wife and I are very flat because we think Paris in 2024 sounds delicious … we'd all love to go to Paris, but we just have to see.
"I'm sure he'll take it one tournament at a time with the next one being his home slam 10 minutes from his house at Melbourne Park and Rod Laver Arena in January, we hope."
As for his son's historic Golden Slam, he said he was more relieved than anything about the "glorious result".
"You feel exhausted – my wife and I are both absolutely shattered today … you feel like you play the game with him," he said.
"But just relief that he's achieved what he wanted to achieve.
"When he gets home in the next few days and gets out of quarantine, we really look forward to hopefully celebrating with him."
While Alcott said he was always proud of his son, he could not take the credit for his achievements.
"Words can't express how proud we all are – all his family — but really it's 99 per cent him and 1 per cent the rest of us," he said.
"He gives us all credit, which is very nice of him.
"But we always say Dylan trains at the gym for an hour, but he trains harder than anyone else for that hour."
If there is one thing Mr Alcott proud of, it is passing onto Alcott an ability to problem-solve and "get the job done".
"He gets so much done and he gets it done so well," he said.