
Jannik Sinner wanted to win Wimbledon but he really needed to beat Carlos Alcaraz
'It is important for sure,' the No. 1-ranked Sinner said Sunday night after prevailing 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 against No. 2 Alcaraz, 'because when you lose several times against someone, it's not easy.' Sinner had lost five matches in a row against Alcaraz, none more disheartening than the one they played last month in the French Open final. Sinner grabbed a two-set lead in that one, then held a trio of championship points before losing in five sets after 5 hours 29 minutes.
'I keep looking up to Carlos because even today I felt like he was doing couple of things better than I did,' Sinner said. 'So that's something … we will work on and prepare ourselves because he's going to come for us again.'
Perhaps as soon as at the US Open, which starts in New York on Aug. 24 and where Sinner is the defending champion. They will be seeded No. 1 and No. 2 again, so could only meet there in another final. Alcaraz won the trophy at Flushing Meadows in 2022, beginning a stretch in which he and Sinner have combined to win nine of the past 12 majors. That includes the last seven, leaving zero doubt that these two young guys—Sinner is 23, Alcaraz is 22—have pushed themselves way past everyone else in the game at the moment.
'I'm just really really happy about having this rivalry with him. It's great for us and it is great for tennis. Every time we play against each other our level is really high,' Alcaraz said. 'We don't (see) a level like this if I'm honest with you. I don't see any (other players) playing against each other (and) having the level that we are playing when we face each other.'
Both serve well, although Sinner was better at that Sunday. Both return well, although again Sinner was superior over these particular three hours. Both cover the court exceedingly well—Alcaraz is faster, Sinner has a bigger reach and is a better slider. Both hit the ball so so hard—Alcaraz is more prone to the spectacular, Sinner is as pure and consistent a ball-striker as there is. And so on.
One other contrast usually is that Alcaraz shows emotion, whether via yells of 'Vamos!' or the sort of point-to-his-ear-then-pump-his-fist celebration he did after winning Sunday's opening set by stretching and reaching low for a cross-court backhand to close a 12-stroke point. Sinner is far more contained. Even his arm-raised victory poses are mild-mannered. Sunday, though, there were more visible displays. He even shouted 'Let's go!' after one point. Later, he shook his racket overhead while the crowd roared after a well-struck backhand. When he took a set with a forehand winner, Sinner held a pose, then lifted a fist. When the match was over, he crouched, lowered his head and pounded his right palm on the grass five times.
'You saw a bit more energy from him in the big moments,' said one of Sinner's coaches, Darren Cahill, 'and a bit more focus to knuckle down and make sure that when he had his nose in front that he kept on closing the door against Carlos.'
Both players spoke about their matchup motivating them to work hard to try to improve. 'It gives me the opportunity to just give my 100 percent every practice, every day. Just to be better thanks to that,' said Alcaraz, who won the past two Wimbledon titles and was 5-0 in Grand Slam finals before Sunday. 'The level that I have to maintain and I have to raise if I want to beat Jannik is really high.'
Sinner described Alcaraz as someone 'who is young, who wins basically everything. You have to be ready,' Sinner explained, 'if you want to keep up.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
Jofra Archer's triumphant return helps England defeat India at Lord's
It was July 14. Of course, Jofra Archer was going to open the bowling for England against India on the final day of the Lords test on Monday. 'Yeah, part of the reason I went with Jof this morning…six years ago now to the day,' England captain Ben Stokes said. On July 14, 2019, Archer helped England win its first Cricket World Cup trophy in the most dramatic final against New Zealand, also at Lords. 'He played a major role,' Stokes said, 'and I had a feeling he'd do something special (on Monday) and crack the game open.' In the fourth over of the day, Archer sent Rishabh Pant's off stump cartwheeling. Then in the day's eighth over, he got Washington Sundar with a fantastic one-hand caught-and-bowled. Archer and Stokes combined to take 3-11 in the first 40 minutes and hastened India's demise from 58-4 overnight to 82-7. India, chasing 193, was eventually dismissed for 170, and England won by 22 runs to take a 2-1 lead in the five-match series. Archer's first test in 4 1/2 years produced an impressive match haul of five wickets. 'I had a gut feeling that Jof's going to do something in his first game back,' Stokes said. 'Every time he's announced on the tannoy, the ground erupts, and when the speeds go up on the screen the feeling changes.' Archer regularly worried India by bowling at speeds of up to 90 mph (145 kph). But he was managed by Stokes, never doing more than five-over spells and spaced well apart. It frustrated Archer, but he also understood after years of being sidelined by elbow and back injuries. 'It was pretty hectic for the first game back,' he told broadcaster Sky Sports. 'I probably bowled a few more overs than I thought I would've (39.2 in the match) but every single one mattered today so I'm not too fussed about it. Only played one test at Lords (on debut in 2019) and that one was just as special as this one. It's been a long time coming, a lot of rehab, a lot of training. But moments like this make it worth it. Managing the workload is still very hard, being told you can bowl some days and not others.' Archer never thought he would not return to test cricket. His previous test was in February 2021 in Ahmedabad, and his previous home test was in August 2020. 'I'm not totally out of the woods yet, but it's a good start,' he said. 'The style of cricket that this team plays, it means I'm going to bowl a lot of overs!' Archer didn't hold back either when he verbally sprayed Pant and Sundar after dismissing them. It was all part of the passions brought on by earlier incidents between the teams. 'We came together as a group yesterday and said you know, sometimes we're too nice. We go to other places and some teams are not as nice to us as we are to them so I guess we just tried to shift it. I don't know if it gave us a bit more of a buzz in the field or not, but we will keep it in the bank for the future!' 'It wasn't a proud moment (to Pant). I just told him to cherish that moment. He came down the track and that annoyed me a little bit so when the ball nipped down the slope (and bowled him) I was so grateful.'


Arab News
2 hours ago
- Arab News
England take 2-1 series lead over India with thrilling Lord's win
LONDON: A thrilling series produced a gripping finale as England beat India by 22 runs in a nail-biting third Test at Lord's on Monday to go 2-1 up with two Tests to were on the brink of defeat at 147-9, still needing a further 46 runs to reach a victory target of 193, when last man Mohammed Siraj joined Ravindra Jadeja in the the pair batted on until after tea on the final day to give India hope of an improbable with India eyeing a stunning success, off-spinner Shoaib Bashir, who had been off the field for much of the match with a finger injury, had the final Siraj played defensively, the ball spun back past him to dislodge the leg bail with the faintest of touches to leave India 170 all the England fielders celebrated, the fiery Siraj was crestfallen as was his partner Jadeja who was left stranded on 61 not out — his fourth consecutive fifty this series — after batting for nearly four-and-a-half captain Ben Stokes bowled two lengthy spells Monday on his way to innings figures of 3-48 in 24 overs, with fast bowler Jofra Archer — in his first Test after more than four years of injury-induced exile — taking 3-55 in medium-pacer Stokes, whose career has been blighted by knee injuries, again proved his worth to England as a fully-fledged all-rounder.'I thought I had taken myself to some pretty dark places before but today was... If bowling to win a Test for your country doesn't get you up, get you excited, then I don't know what does,' Stokes told Sky Sports.'The game was on the line and nothing was going to stop me bowling.'Victory came exactly six years to the day since Stokes and Archer both starred in England's dramatic 2019 50-over World Cup final win over New Zealand at Lord' bowlers made early breakthroughs Monday, with player-of-the match Stokes saying the anniversary was behind his decision to open the bowlig with Archer.'Jof played a big role in that and I just had one of those feelings he would do something special,' said 30-year-old Archer added: 'It was pretty hectic for the first game back. I probably bowled a few more overs than I thought I would have but every single one mattered today so I'm not too fussed about it.'India were all but beaten at 112-8 when tailender Jasprit Bumrah came out to bat immediately after Jadeja and Bumrah kept England at bay with a stubborn stand of 35 in 22 overs.'I think the position in the morning, to make a comeback like this was tremendous from Ravindra Jadeja and the lower order,' said India captain Shubman defying a run of four successive noughts in Test cricket, defended gamely while making five in 54 balls only for his innings to end when he top-edged a pull off Stokes to substitute fielder Sam Cook at were now 147-9 — a position that meant tea was delayed by 30 Jadeja, who overturned an lbw decision given against him on 26, went to fifty when a flashing cut off Stokes flew over the slips for the left-hander's fourth four in 150 balls after tea, Archer struck Siraj a painful blow on the shoulder and it was not long before he fell to match became a second-innings shoot-out after both teams made 387 in their first then posted 192 before India slumped to 58-4 when Stokes bowled nightwatchman Akash Deep with what became the last ball of Sunday's 71-4 on Monday, the match swung England's way once more as India lost three wickets for 11 runs in collapsing to Pant — who only came into bat on Monday following Deep's departure — charged down the pitch to drive Archer for a typically aggressive two balls later Archer, repeatedly topping the 90 mph mark, bowled the dangerman for nine with a superb full-length delivery that clipped the top of off were looking to KL Rahul to anchor their chase after the opener's first-innings he had added just six runs to his overnight 33 when he was lbw on review to who made his Test debut at Lord's in 2019, then reduced India to 82-7 when he held a sharp one-handed caught and bowled chance to dismiss Washington Sundar for a duck.


Al Arabiya
3 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Sports Betting Roundup: Wimbledon Favorite Iga Swiatek Delivers for Bettors in Women's Final
Iga Swiatek took in a big share of the money and delivered a big win in the Wimbledon final. Swiatek won her first title at the All England Club on Saturday by beating Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 in the women's final. In the men's final on Sunday, Jannik Sinner defeated Carlos Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Trends of the Week At the BetMGM online sportsbook, Swiatek (-275) was a big favorite in the final. She took in 37 percent of the bets and 57 percent of the money. Going into the tournament, Swiatek was +700. She was +350 before the quarterfinals and +190 before the semifinals. In the men's field, both Sinner and Alcaraz were -110. But 56 percent of bets and 58 percent of money came in on Alcaraz. In the futures market, 51 percent of the money was on Alcaraz. In the WNBA, Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever routed the Dallas Wings 102-83. Indiana was a 10.5-point favorite and took in 70 percent of the money. Clark's over 17.5 points prop was the most bet of the day. She finished with 14 points. Upsets of the Week Going into Sunday, the Pittsburgh Pirates had lost eight games in a row, and the Minnesota Twins were -190 on the moneyline with 90 percent of the money coming in on them. Pittsburgh was able to snap its streak with a 2-1 win thanks to a run in the top of the ninth. Chris Gotterup (+10000) won the Scottish Open for his first career PGA Tour victory. He finished at 15 under, which was good for a two-shot win over two players including Rory McIlroy. He took in only 0.1 percent of the money in pre-tournament outright winner betting. Coming Up Monday night is the MLB Home Run Derby. As of Monday morning, Cal Raleigh has the best odds to win at +275. Behind him are Oneil Cruz (+350), James Wood (+400), Matt Olson (+800), Brent Rooker (+850), Byron Buxton (+900), Junior Caminero (+1000), and Jazz Chisholm Jr. (+1400). The most money (26 percent) is on Wood.