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Sinner downs Alcaraz to win first Wimbledon title

Sinner downs Alcaraz to win first Wimbledon title

News.com.aua day ago
Jannik Sinner downed defending champion Carlos Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 on Sunday to win his first Wimbledon title, gaining sweet revenge for his painful defeat in the French Open final.
The world number one is the first Italian to win at the All England Club and now has four Grand Slams to his name at the age of 23.
Sinner stayed ice cool after losing the first set, with the momentum quickly shifting, and he was not broken once in the final three sets.
He squandered three championship points in the final at Roland Garros last month but this time made no mistake as he served out for victory.
Sinner said he was "living his dream", prompting an eruption of cheers from the Centre Court crowd.
"An amazing tournament, thank you for the player you are," he said to world number two Alcaraz. "It is so difficult to play against you.
"I am going to keep hold of this (trophy), you have two already!"
The tennis world has been captivated by the emergence of the new rivalry between the players to follow the storied "Big Three" era of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.
Sinner and two-time defending Wimbledon champion Alcaraz have now shared the past seven Grand Slam titles between them, with the Italian winning four of those.
Defeat in Paris last month was a bitter blow for Sinner, who led by two sets and had a clutch of championship points.
Prior to Sunday's victory, he had lost five consecutive times against Alcaraz, including the final of the Italian Open in the first tournament he played after returning from a three-month doping ban.
But this time he turned the tables in impressive fashion.
Both players were solid on serve until the fifth game, when Alcaraz sprayed a forehand long to hand Sinner the first break of the match.
But the Spaniard levelled at 4-4 to the delight of the Centre Court crowd, which included Prince William and his wife Catherine, Princess of Wales.
Sinner double-faulted to hand Alcaraz a second set point.
The Italian laced a searing forehand down the line but Alcaraz produced a magical backhand winner, pointing his finger to his ear as the crowd rose to their feet.
- Momentum shift -
Sinner, still wearing a protective white sleeve after his nasty fall in his fourth-round match against Grigor Dimitrov, broke in the first game of the second set and led 3-1 after play was briefly halted by a flying cork.
Sinner shook his racquet after winning the first point as he served for the set and was rewarded with cheers before levelling the match with a whipped forehand.
The third set was a tense affair that went with serve until the ninth game when Sinner broke as Alcaraz slipped over on the baseline and he went 2-1 up.
The momentum was now all with Sinner and he broke again in the third game of the fourth set to take the match by the scruff of the neck.
The chance was always there that Alcaraz would produce the magic he found at Roland Garros but Sinner stayed focused.
The Spaniard had two break points to hit back in the eighth game but Sinner shut the door.
Sinner stepped up to serve for the championship amid a cacophony of noise, sealing the deal on his second championship point.
The Italian cruised through the first three rounds at Wimbledon, losing just 17 games -- equalling an Open era record set in 1972.
But he got lucky in the fourth round against inspired Bulgarian 19th seed Dimitrov, who was leading by two sets when he suffered an injury that forced him to quit.
Sinner got back into the groove against 10th seed Ben Shelton in the quarter-finals before demolishing seven-time champion Djokovic in the last four.
Alcaraz had been aiming to become just the fifth man in the Open era to win three consecutive Wimbledons after Bjorn Borg, Pete Sampras, Federer and Djokovic.
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Loading The sport's powerbrokers could not have dreamed of the 'Sincaraz' emergence when they began imagining tour life after the magic carpet ride they went on with Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. Alcaraz believes the rivalry is producing tennis no one else is capable of – and warns it will only get better. 'I'm really happy about having this rivalry with him. I think it's great for us, and it is great for tennis,' Alcaraz said. 'Every time we play against each other, I think our level is really high. I think we don't watch a level like this [anywhere else], if I'm honest with you. I don't see any player playing against each other, having the level that we are playing when we face each other. 'We're building a really great rivalry because we're playing the final of a grand slam, of Masters, the best tournaments in the world. It's going to be better and better. 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Sinner and Alcaraz won the last seven major titles combined, starting with last year's Australian Open. Alcaraz also claimed the 2022 US Open and 2023 Wimbledon championships, and there have been only three Djokovic interventions in that time. Australia's Rinky Hijikata has not played against either of them, but watched in awe as they slugged it out at Roland-Garros. 'The French Open was one of the best matches I've ever seen. I thought the level was a joke,' Hijikata said. 'Sometimes, you were watching, and you didn't feel like they were playing the same sport as you. The rivalry that they have is great for the sport, and [they are] two unbelievably, genuinely good guys also, so I'm pumped for both of them.' The 'Sincaraz' rivalry 2021: Paris Masters, round of 32, Alcaraz d Sinner, 7-6 (7-1), 7-5 2022: Wimbledon, round of 16, Sinner d Alcaraz, 6-1, 6-4, 6-7 (8-10), 6-3 Umag, final, Sinner d Alcaraz, 6-7 (5-7), 6-1, 6-1 US Open, quarter-final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 6-3, 6-7 (7-9), 6-7 (0-7), 7-5, 6-3 2023: Indian Wells Masters, semi-final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 7-6 (7-4), 6-3 Miami Masters, semi-final, Sinner d Alcaraz, 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 6-2 Beijing, semi-final, Sinner d Alcaraz, 7-6 (7-4), 6-1 2024: Indian Wells Masters, semi-final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 Roland-Garros, semi-final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 2-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 Beijing, final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 6-7 (6-8), 6-4, 7-6 (7-3) 2025: Rome Masters, final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 7-6 (7-5), 6-1 Roland-Garros, final, Alcaraz d Sinner, 4-6, 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (7-2) Wimbledon, final, Sinner d Alcaraz, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 Total: Alcaraz leads 8-5 The decisive moment Sinner, who was banned for three months earlier this year after coming to an agreement with WADA over an anti-doping rule breach, enjoyed good fortune to make it this far. He trailed Grigor Dimitrov by two sets in the fourth round at the start of the week, before the Bulgarian retired with a right pectoral muscle injury that has since required surgery. A four-point sequence from double-break-point down while serving for a 5-3 lead in the fourth set proved the decisive moment for Sinner as he avoided the cruel fate that befell him on the brink of victory in France. He landed only one first serve in that stretch, but played courageously – and was rewarded. Sinner was two sets from the title in the next game on Alcaraz's serve, but the script demanded that the Italian close it out himself, to banish the demons from five weeks ago. Sinner did not flinch, starting with outlasting Alcaraz in a baseline exchange on the first point. He raced to triple championship point, and fired down a 220km/h serve – his fastest of the day – on the second of them that Alcaraz could not return. A huge smile instantly broke out on Sinner's face, with arms aloft, before he met Alcaraz for a wholesome exchange at the net, as the latest – but certainly not the last – chapter in their captivating rivalry concluded. 'It's always a bad feeling losing matches. I think it's a little bit even worse when you lose in a final,' Alcaraz said. 'I'm just really proud about everything I've done; the last four weeks on grass here in London. I leave Wimbledon with the head really high because I did everything that I could today. I just played against someone who played an unbelievable game.' In a match with little between the combatants, Alcaraz bemoaned his first-serve percentage of 53, compared to Sinner's 62, which was costly when coupled with seven double faults despite him adding 15 aces. Living up to the hype The second grand slam final between the ATP Tour's new superstars was hugely anticipated, so much so that the queue to occupy a patch of grass on Henman Hill – or Murray Mound, whatever tickles your fancy – was hundreds of metres long. Even Prince William made the trek to Wimbledon, joining the Princess of Wales, who backed up from the women's final, while the Hewitts – Lleyton and Bec – were one row back in the royal box with Andre Agassi. King Felipe of Spain jumped on a plane to be there, too. Alcaraz ended his post-match speech by saying how honoured he was that the king came to watch him. Loading Sinner doubted after his straight-sets semi-final win over seven-time champion Djokovic two days ago whether he and Alcaraz could live up to their Roland-Garros thriller. But these two prizefighters don't know how to do routine, at least when they are on opposite ends of a baseline. The theory in tennis circles was that Sinner needed this one, since Alcaraz had won all five of their on-court stoushes since the start of last year. They were all close, but the Spaniard kept winning them. Until now.

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