Carlos Alcaraz earned £2.35million for winning Wimbledon but still lives with mum and dad in flat above a KEBAB shop
WORLD No1 Carlos Alcaraz will go home to live in his parents’ flat above a kebab shop — even after winning £2.35MILLION at Wimbledon.
Alcaraz, 20, dethroned Novak Djokovic after a spectacular five-set epic to become the king of SW19 this afternoon.
The Serbian legend’s 46-match winning streak on Centre Court - dating back 10 years - was halted by a 1-6 7-6 6-1 3-6 6-4 victory for the brilliant Spaniard.
Djokovic broke down in tears afterwards as he received his runners-up trophy from Princess of Wales Kate Middleton while he was applauded by his wife Jelena and two of his children.
But Alcaraz, whose massive winner's cheque will add to his estimated £18million wealth, still stays at a £170,000 apartment with his mum and dad when he is not at tournaments.
He has sponsorship deals with firms such as Louis Vuitton and Calvin Klein to fall back on yet choses to remain above the Turquesa Kebab & Pizza takeaway in El Palmar near Murcia, southern Spain.
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Punters can pick up a doner kebab for the equivalent of £3.85 at the eaterie in the small town where the tennis ace grew up.
A giant mural has been painted in El Palmar to celebrate Alcaraz, the youngest men’s winner of Wimbledon since Boris Becker in 1987.
His big breakthrough in the tennis world came last September when he defeated Casper Ruud in the US Open final, becoming the New York tournament’s youngest men’s winner since Pete Sampras in 1990.
At SW19, he became the first man outside the 'Big Four' of Djokovic, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray to win the championship since Lleyton Hewitt in 2002 - 21 years ago.
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But despite becoming one of the sport’s biggest stars he is known simply as Charly or Carlitos to locals in El Palmar.
The top floor of the family’s duplex, a minute’s drive from a rundown neighbourhood traditionally known as a no-go area for outsiders, is packed with his old tennis gear and rackets and clothes from sponsors.
Carlos, who pals say is now single after dating a local tennis player called Maria Gonzalez Gimenez, stays in one of the four downstairs bedrooms when he’s in town.
The flat has recently undergone a refurbishment thanks in part to the millions he has made from the court — with Wimbledon the 13th title of his career already.
Dad Carlos Sr, a former low-lever professional tennis player, and mum Virginia were both in attendance on Sunday - and proudly hugged Carlos after he climbed his way to his box after his win.
Carlos is preparing to help his mum and dad move to a new home on a luxury residential estate with his growing bank balance — with prize money topped up by lucrative deals with other big brands including Nike, Babolat, BMW and Rolex.
The Sun on Sunday has been told the teetotaller okayed the purchase of three plots of land where his father, also called Carlos, whose own professional tennis dreams were scuppered by lack of money, plans to build two large villas.
One is expected to become the new parental home and the other the place the tennis pro rests up between tournaments.
The new spot is just a 15-minute drive from the current family home where his two younger brothers still live.
One, 11-year-old Jaime, is already being tipped to follow in his famous older sibling’s footsteps on the tennis court.
Alcaraz, who holidayed with Spurs defender Sergio Reguilon in Ibiza last month, admitted in a recent Spanish TV interview: “Until very recently I didn’t consider myself to be a famous person and I can say that I get nervous about practically every famous person I meet.”
Carlos Santos Bosque, who taught the tennis star in a small group from the age of four, said he knew that his young protege had big things ahead of him.
He said: “I could see Carlitos was going to become a professional tennis player when he was around nine.
“You couldn’t tell he was going to become world number one but you saw he was going to be one of the best.
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“When you travelled with him, trainers from places like Marbella and Miami would approach you.
“People would want to come to practise with Carlitos. There’d be crowds watching when he played as a young boy.”
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