The Barcelona stage has found its new face. Less than twenty-four hours after Carlos Alcaraz announced his withdrawal, the Catalan crowd rallied around another nineteen-year-old Spaniard. Rafael Jodar dismissed Argentina's Camilo Ugo Carabelli 6-3, 6-3 in one hour and twenty-nine minutes on Wednesday evening, booking a quarter-final spot at the ATP 500 clay event.
The wild card already carried a remarkable line on his resume. Twelve months ago, he was flirting with the 600th spot in the rankings. Since then, a handful of Challenger titles and a maiden ATP crown in Marrakech in late March have propelled the player from Madrid up to world No. 57, a major leap for someone still under nineteen when the clay season began.
His Barcelona run joins a list that only two Spanish names had reached this century. Rafael Nadal made the quarter-finals in 2005 and 2006 before turning the tournament into a personal fortress. Alcaraz emulated his elder in 2022 and 2023. Jodar becomes the third, at a very similar age to his two benchmarks.
Against Ugo Carabelli, the Spaniard never allowed the Argentine to unroll his heavy topspin backhand. First serves hitting the angles, systematic attacks on the second serve, and forward pressure at the first short ball: the tactical plan was executed with veteran focus. The most telling number is the 79% of points won on first serve, a figure that swung both sets without Jodar facing a single break point.
Jodar had already imposed his tempo in the opening round against Jaume Munar (6-1, 6-2), before stringing a third Catalan victory. His clay start of 2026 has bordered on perfect: seven consecutive wins on dirt, the Marrakech title, and three matches won at the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona without dropping a set. "I know where I want to go, I work for it, but I stay the same boy," he told the ATP Tour before his recent rise, a low-key tone that stands in stark contrast to the buzz now surrounding his name.
His quarter-final will bring , the seventh seed, who navigated the opening round of the bracket at the expense of Ethan Quinn in three sets. The Briton had lost to Jodar earlier this year in the first round of the Abierto Mexicano de Telcel, 6-3 6-2. A style clash — defensive left-hander against aggressive right-hander — should add spice to Friday's date on the Pista Rafa Nadal.
For Spanish tennis, the sequence echoes what Madrid's newspapers started calling the "Jodar generation" back in 2023. With Alcaraz in the medical room and Jannik Sinner still on top, the Murcian now watches his junior from the stands. A succession is brewing in Barcelona, and it could trigger its first major breakthrough as soon as this weekend.



