Alcaraz faces arch-rival Sinner in blockbuster Wimbledon final
Carlos Alcaraz will target a third successive Wimbledon title as Jannik Sinner aims to win the All England Club crown for the first time in the latest enthralling chapter of their burgeoning rivalry.
Just five weeks after Alcaraz staged one of the all-time great fightbacks to beat Sinner in a classic French Open final, the pair bring their battle for supremacy to Wimbledon's hallowed Centre Court.
Alcaraz and Sinner have shared seven of the past eight Grand Slams between them, evenly splitting the six on offer since the start of 2024.
The tennis world has been captivated by the emergence of the new rivalry after the storied era of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.
Alcaraz is the flashy showman who has stolen the hearts of the Centre Court crowd, while world number one Sinner is Djokovic 2.0 -- a ruthlessly efficient operator who rarely misses.
Two-time defending Wimbledon champion Alcaraz will start as the marginal favourite but knows he has to bring his best to keep Sinner at bay.
Spain's Carlos Alcaraz is the two-time defending Wimbledon champion. Picture: AFP
The Spanish world number two has won eight of his 12 matches against his Italian rival, including the past five.
Their most recent clash was in last month's phenomenal five-and-a-half hour French Open final, when Alcaraz rallied from two sets down and saved three match points to defend his clay-court title.
The 22-year-old, who has five majors under his belt, is on a career-best winning run of 24 matches and is unbeaten at the All England Club since 2022.
But three-time Grand Slam winner Sinner, playing his first Wimbledon final, will take heart from the fact that he was the last man to beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon, in the fourth round three years ago.
This will be the first time Jannik Sinner has played a Wimbledon final. Picture: AFP
The Spaniard, who beat US fifth seed Taylor Fritz in the semi-finals, does not believe his remarkable comeback in Paris gives him the mental edge.
'I'm pretty sure he's going to take a lot of things from the French Open final,' he said.
'He's going to be better physically, he's going to be better mentally. He's going to be prepared to give 100 percent.'
Both men have shown vulnerabilities during their runs to the final. Alcaraz was taken to five sets in his opener against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini and has dropped sets in three of his other matches.
Sinner, 23, was rock solid for three rounds but had an almighty scare -- and a huge slice of luck -- when his fourth-round opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, retired when leading by two sets.
But he swept past US 10th seed Ben Shelton in straight sets and demolished an under-par Djokovic in the semi-finals.
Originally published as Alcaraz faces arch-rival Sinner in blockbuster Wimbledon final
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Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Sweet revenge: Sinner downs Alcaraz to win Wimbledon
Jannik Sinner has exorcised the wretched memory of his painful French Open title capitulation by defeating his great young rival Carlos Alcaraz and ripping away his Wimbledon crown. In a fine final but one that never quite hit the extraordinary heights of their Roland-Garros thriller five weeks earlier, Sinner proved too icily consistent for the erratic champion on a warm afternoon on Centre Court on Sunday, prevailing 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 to earn his fourth grand slam title. The 23-year-old world No.1 recovered from losing the first set, which Alcaraz wrapped up with the shot of the match, to then dominate proceedings and seal victory in four minutes over three hours. "This was only a dream, it was far away where I'm from," Sinner told the crowd after collecting the trophy from Kate, Princess of Wales. "I'm just living my dream, it's amazing." Alcaraz had pulled off an incredible escape in Paris when he saved three championship points in a five-set, five-hour 29-minute epic, but this time Sinner was not about to let him off the hook as he constantly applied the pressure with his suffocatingly accurate and powerful groundstrokes. It was his first victory over Alcaraz in his last six attempts as he handed the 22-year-old Spaniard his first defeat in a grand slam final. Alcaraz had been on a career-best 24-match unbeaten run, and had won 20 matches in a row at the All England Club, including victories against Novak Djokovic in the 2023 and 2024 finals, yet he couldn't join the elite group to have won three in a row.

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Wimbledon clash of the titans as Alcaraz, Sinner face off
Carlos Alcaraz will target a third successive Wimbledon title as Jannik Sinner aims to win the All England Club crown for the first time in the latest enthralling chapter of their burgeoning rivalry. Just five weeks after Alcaraz staged one of the all-time great fightbacks to beat Sinner in a classic French Open final, the pair bring their battle for supremacy to Wimbledon's hallowed Centre Court on Sunday. Alcaraz and Sinner have shared seven of the past eight Grand Slams between them, evenly splitting the six on offer since the start of 2024. The tennis world has been captivated by the emergence of the new rivalry after the storied era of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. Alcaraz is the flashy showman who has stolen the hearts of the Centre Court crowd, while world number one Sinner is Djokovic 2.0 — a ruthlessly efficient operator who rarely misses. Two-time defending Wimbledon champion Alcaraz will start as the marginal favourite on Sunday but knows he has to bring his best to keep Sinner at bay. The Spanish world number two has won eight of his 12 matches against his Italian rival, including the past five. Their most recent clash was in last month's phenomenal five-and-a-half hour French Open final, when Alcaraz rallied from two sets down and saved three match points to defend his clay-court title. The 22-year-old, who has five majors under his belt, is on a career-best winning run of 24 matches and is unbeaten at the All England Club since 2022. But three-time Grand Slam winner Sinner, playing his first Wimbledon final, will take heart from the fact that he was the last man to beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon, in the fourth round three years ago. The Spaniard, who beat US fifth seed Taylor Fritz in the semi-finals, does not believe his remarkable comeback in Paris gives him the mental edge. 'I'm pretty sure he's going to take a lot of things from the French Open final,' he said. 'He's going to be better physically, he's going to be better mentally. He's going to be prepared to give 100 per cent.' Both men have shown vulnerabilities during their runs to the final. Alcaraz was taken to five sets in his opener against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini and has dropped sets in three of his other matches. Sinner, 23, was rock solid for three rounds but had an almighty scare – and a huge slice of luck – when his fourth-round opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, retired when leading by two sets. But he swept past US 10th seed Ben Shelton in straight sets and demolished an under-par Djokovic in the semi-finals. Mental edge The Italian top seed played down the lingering impact of his defeat at Roland Garros. 'I think if it was too much in my head, I would not be in the situation to play a final again,' he said. 'I'm very happy to share the court with Carlos once again. It's going to be difficult, I know that. 'But I'm looking forward to it. I always try to put myself in these kind of situations that I really love. Sundays at every tournament are very special.' Alcaraz is attempting to join an elite club of players in the Open era who have won Wimbledon three years in a row — Bjorn Borg, Pete Sampras, Federer and Djokovic. But if there is one man who can stop him it is Sinner, the reigning US Open and Australian Open champion, who has been impressive since his return in May from a three-month doping ban. The match is too close to call, though seven-time champion Djokovic narrowly favours Alcaraz. 'I think I will give a slight edge to Carlos as a favourite because of the two titles he's won here and the way he's playing and the confidence he has right now,' he said. 'But it's just a slight advantage because Jannik is hitting the ball extremely well. I think it's going to be, again, a very close match-up like they had in Paris.'

Herald Sun
3 hours ago
- Herald Sun
Tennis world reacts to Wimbledon final horror as Kate Middleton watches on
Princess Kate sat through the most one-sided women's final in 114 years in at times awkward and hard-to-watch scenes at Wimbledon overnight Saturday. Iga Swiatek demolished Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0 in just 57 minutes - the first time a woman has won a final at Wimbledon without dropping a game since 1911, when Britain's Dorothea Lambert Chambers triumphed by the same scoreline. Anisimova was reduced to a shell of the player that upset world number one Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals - and left in tears during her runner-up trophy acceptance speech. She said after the match she had been 'frozen by nerves' playing in the biggest match of her career. The tennis world tried to be kind as the young American's dreams became a real life nightmare. Tennis icon Rafael Nadal was one of many viewers to show some public support for the overwhelmed 23-year-old. 'Be proud, Anisimova Amanda, Grand Slam finalist,' he wrote on X. American compatriot Coco Gauff tweeted: 'So much to be proud of Amanda. Keep your head up.' Aussie Nick Kyrgios also posted: 'Amanda!!! Slam finalist!!! Head up'. 'Anyone who goes on social media to trash Amanda needs to really check themselves,' Aussie tennis great Rennae Stubbs added. 'This is a kid that just made her first major final and deservedly so. She's also someone who's overcome a lot, including losing her father when she was a teenager. She is a lovely kid, so chill.' America tennis coach and TV commentator Brad Gilbert called it a 'very sad day for tennis'. 'You'd have to be pretty cold not to feel for Amanda Anisimova,' added tennis commentator Craig Gabriel. 'Amanda Anisimova crushed her speech in the most beautiful, serene way, and I'll never forget it,' wrote tennis journo Chris Oddo. 'That was truly poignant, and I have so much respect for how she pulled it together and created an incredible moment for herself, her family and tennis on Centre Court.' 'This has been far more about Swiatek being great than Anisimova being awful,' opined tennis journalist Ben Rothenberg. 'But either way, it's lopsided and ... an all-time beat down.' Amid the trolling there were some jokes you just had to laugh at. 'It's going so quickly that people haven't had time to faint yet,' one person wrote, after a series of incidents in the hot weather at the tournament. 'This final could have been an email,' another added. Anisimova will rise to be No. 7 on the WTA Tour rankings as a result of her run this week — a new career high. Swiatek, 24, is just the second player in the Open era to win a major without losing a game in the final since Steffi Graf humbled Natalia Zvereva at the 1988 French Open. 'It seems super surreal,' said Swiatek, who is the first Wimbledon singles champion from Poland and has now won majors on all surfaces. 'I didn't even dream, for me it was way too far. I feel like I am already an experienced player after winning the Slams before but I never expected this one. 'This year I really, really enjoyed it and feel I improved my form here. 'I am always going to remember the opening of champagne bottles between serves. It is a sound that will keep me awake at night.' Swiatek lost just one set during the entire tournament as she won her first trophy on grass, two weeks after reaching the final of the grass-court event at Bad Homburg. US 13th seed Anisimova was expected to prove a stern test, but Swiatek performed a demolition job. Anisimova made a nervous start. She was broken in the first game, soon slipping 2-0 behind and the signs looked ominous. The American appeared to have found her feet in her next service game but the merciless Swiatek refused to give ground and recovered to move 3-0 ahead when Anisimova double-faulted. At 4-0 down Anisimova was facing a first-set wipe-out but she was powerless to halt the rampant Swiatek, who sealed the opener 6-0 in just 25 minutes. The American won just six points on her serve in the first set and committed 14 unforced errors. An increasingly desperate Anisimova could not stem the tide in the second set, double-faulting again in the third game to give her opponent game point and then netting a backhand. The crowd got behind her but to no avail as Swiatek kept up her level, serving out to win and celebrating before consoling her devastated opponent. Anisimova made 28 unforced errors in the 12 games. Swiatek is Wimbledon's eighth consecutive first-time women's champion since Serena Williams won her seventh and final title at the All England Club in 2016. She has won all six major finals in which she has competed. Swiatek, who now has 100 career Grand Slam match wins, has won the French Open four times and also the US Open, in 2022. Her previous best performance at Wimbledon was a run to the quarter-finals in 2023. The distraught Anisimova left court briefly before returning for the trophy presentation. The American, who lost in qualifying last year, broke down in tears again during her speech on court, calling Swiatek an 'incredible player'. 'I know I didn't have enough today but I'll keep putting in the work,' she said. 'I keep believing in myself and I hope to be back here one day. Thank you everyone.' She went on to say: 'I was a bit frozen there with my nerves. Maybe the last two weeks I got a bit tired or something. 'It's not how I would have wanted my first Grand Slam final to go. 'I think I was a little bit in shock after, as well. But I told myself, 'I'll definitely come out stronger after this'. That's not an easy thing to go through, losing 6-0, 6-0 in a Grand Slam final. 'If anything, I can look at it as a positive and something I can look at as motivation going forward. - with AFP Originally published as Tennis world reacts to Wimbledon final horror as Kate Middleton watches on