logo
Why Wimbledon is desperate for top billing in the Alcaraz-Sinner arms race

Why Wimbledon is desperate for top billing in the Alcaraz-Sinner arms race

Yahoo2 days ago
A matter of hours after Friday's draw at Wimbledon, practice sessions were in full swing across the All England Club. Just before 1pm, spotted by an eagle-eyed reporter in the media centre, were the top two players in the men's game: chatting, laughing even, in genuine joviality side-by-side as they walked to their respective courts south of the grounds.
It might seem somewhat odd that Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner were in conversation, in such a relaxed manner, just a few days out from the third Grand Slam of the year. After all, it was only three weeks ago that the Spaniard fought back from the brink to defeat the world No 1 in the final at Roland Garros, winning one of the greatest matches of all time.
Advertisement
As such, you'd think Sinner would be sick of the sight of his Spanish adversary. Apparently not. This blossoming, intoxicating rivalry on the court takes place in an environment of impressive mutual respect. In fact, their genuine admiration for one another is as authentic as their will to win on court.
Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz could face off in the Wimbledon final, just five weeks on from their incredible French Open final (Getty)
Alcaraz, by virtue of his superior head-to-head record over Sinner (8-4 – and Sinner has not beaten him since 2023) and his two previous titles in SW19, is the clear favourite heading into Wimbledon 2025. The Spaniard is on a sensational 18-match winning streak and has not lost a match since 20 April. Unequivocally, he is the man to beat.
Yet Sinner's dominance for the vast majority of the five-and-a-half hour epic in Paris should give the Italian a huge amount of confidence and belief, should the pair meet in a fortnight on Centre Court. It is the final showdown that the whole world wants to see again. And Wimbledon is desperate for top billing in the Alcaraz-Sinner arms race.
Advertisement
Much has been made in the build-up to this year's Championships of the decision to move the start time of the singles finals from 2pm to 4pm. AELTC chief executive Sally Bolton insists the move is to make sure the 'champions are crowned in front of the widest possible audience'.
No doubt the move – which sees the final now take place at a more convenient time of 11am (ET) in New York – has been encouraged by a lucrative American television deal. But it also represents the wider significance of the final being the best of the best, in front of as many eyeballs as possible. After Paris, there's no doubt who those two are.
Alcaraz and seven-time champion Novak Djokovic have put on tremendous finals in the last two years, but even the Serb reaching the final this year ahead of Sinner would feel like a let-down, such was the captivation of the French Open showpiece.
In this regard, the Sinner-Alcaraz rivalry evokes memories of Roger Federer's battles with Rafael Nadal. Their showdowns in major finals took place across all surfaces, in the final of the Australian Open (twice), Roland Garros (four times) and Wimbledon (three times).
Advertisement
The height of their rivalry was the 2006-2008 period, in which they squared off at Roland Garros and Wimbledon three years running, with the crescendo of that sensational 2008 final in near-darkness. Wimbledon would be desperate for an equivalent contest as the sun sets on 13 July.
Roger Federer lost arguably the greatest match of all time to Rafael Nadal in the 2008 Wimbledon final (PA)
It is not the only way the two rivalries are alike; their contrasting playing styles made for tremendous matchups.
'Off the court, we are quite similar,' Sinner said last year of Alcaraz. 'On the court, we are different.
'He is the one who brings the firepower, the hotshots, he involves the crowd. He's a bit different. I am more the solid player, quite calm. It's like fire and ice a bit, but it's a nice combination.'
Advertisement
From a British perspective, the only exception to the Alcaraz-Sinner final narrative is the explosive emergence of Jack Draper, who enters his home Slam at a career-high No 4 in the world.
The 23-year-old's progression in the last 12 months has been astonishing; he has focused on marginal gains, such as employing a breathing coach in Ann Coxhead, and devoting all aspects of his life to the sport. As he rather bluntly summed up on Saturday: 'I suppose it's just been growing up.'
Jack Draper enters Wimbledon at a career-high of No 4 in the world (PA)
So, can Draper follow in Andy Murray's footsteps – in the first Wimbledon since the Scot's retirement – and win the sport's most prestigious tournament? He's been dealt a tough hand in Friday's draw, with major winner Marin Cilic and the in-form Alexander Bublik (who beat him at Roland Garros) potentially lying in wait in rounds two and three respectively.
Advertisement
Even if he can navigate those tasks, he's seeded to play Djokovic in the quarter-finals. As daunting a challenge as that would be, it will tell us a huge amount about Draper's mentality and future potential if he is able to reach the latter stages, with the home crowd right behind him along the way.
Onwards we go then to Monday, when Alcaraz opens up proceedings on Centre Court in what should be a fun encounter against journeyman Italian maverick Fabio Fognini. The Spaniard could face Oliver Tarvet, the British No 33 and world No 719, in what would be a dream occasion for the San Diego University player, in round two.
Overall, there are 13 Brits in the men's draw, with an all-British clash between Dan Evans and Jay Clarke in round one worth keeping an eye on too. The winner would be set to face Djokovic.
Sinner was the last man to beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon, back in 2022 (Getty)
Yet beyond the home wildcards, the compelling narrative remains the top two. Sinner actually beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon three years ago over four sets in the fourth round, when the pair were just emerging onto the world stage.
It means Sinner was the last man to beat Alcaraz at the All England Club. And, to a large degree, it feels very much like the Italian is the only man who can stand in the way of the Alcaraz three-peat.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Madison Keys loses in stunning Wimbledon upset to 104th-ranked Laura Siegemund
Madison Keys loses in stunning Wimbledon upset to 104th-ranked Laura Siegemund

New York Post

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Madison Keys loses in stunning Wimbledon upset to 104th-ranked Laura Siegemund

LONDON — This most unpredictable of Wimbledons delivered yet another surprise Friday when reigning Australian Open champion Madison Keys, the No. 6 seed, was a lopsided loser in the third round, eliminated 6-3, 6-3 by 104th-ranked Laura Siegemund of Germany. Keys' exit left just one of the top six women in the bracket before the end of Week 1: No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, who stuck around by claiming the last five games and defeating 2021 U.S. Open champion Emma Raducanu of Britain 7-6 (6), 6-4 at a boisterous Centre Court at night. No. 2 Coco Gauff, No. 3 Jessica Pegula, No. 4 Jasmine Paolini and No. 5 Zheng Qinwen already were out. The men's field has also seen its share of surprises, including a Wimbledon record 13 seeds going out in the first round. 'At times, it wasn't the best quality, let's say. But I managed, and in the end, it's just important to find solutions and I did that well. Kept my nerves in the end,' Siegemund said, then added with a laugh: 'There are always nerves. If you don't have nerves in this moment, you're probably dead.' Madison Keys plays a forehand in the Ladies' Singles Third Round match against Laura Siegemund of Germany on day five of Wimbledon. Getty Images Wimbledon might be the only Grand Slam event where Keys hasn't reached at least the semifinals, but she has participated in the quarterfinals there twice and is enjoying a breakthrough 2025, including her title at Melbourne Park in January. Keys' power vs. Siegemund's spins and slices offered quite a contrast in styles, and this outcome was surprisingly one-way traffic on a windy afternoon at No. 2 Court. The key statistic, undoubtedly, was this: Keys made 31 unforced errors, 20 more than Siegemund. Laura Siegemund of celebrates winning match point against Madison Keys. Getty Images When it ended with one last backhand return from Keys that sailed wide, Siegemund smiled broadly, raised her arms and jumped up and down repeatedly. 'You can't not be happy when you beat a great player like Madison,' Siegemund said. How unexpected is this for Siegemund? Before this year, her career record at the All England Club was 2-5, and she'd never made it past the second round. Taking into account all four Grand Slam tournaments, she had reached the third round only once in 28 previous appearances, getting to the quarterfinals at the 2020 French Open. 'There is technically no pressure for me,' said Siegemund, at 37 the oldest woman remaining in the tournament. 'I try to remember that I only play for myself. I don't feel like I need to prove anything anymore. My boyfriend often tells me that.' On Sunday, the German faces another participant no one could have predicted would be at this stage of the grass-court major: 101st-ranked Solana Sierra of Argentina, who lost in qualifying and made it into the main draw when another player withdrew.

Another Wimbledon women's seed, Madison Keys, is sent packing, while No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka moves on
Another Wimbledon women's seed, Madison Keys, is sent packing, while No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka moves on

Boston Globe

time29 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Another Wimbledon women's seed, Madison Keys, is sent packing, while No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka moves on

Advertisement 'At times, it wasn't the best quality, let's say. But I managed, and in the end, it's just important to find solutions and I did that well. Kept my nerves in the end,' Siegemund said, then added with a laugh: 'There are always nerves. If you don't have nerves in this moment, you're probably dead.' Wimbledon might be the only Grand Slam event where Keys hasn't reached at least the semifinals, but she has participated in the quarterfinals there twice and is enjoying a breakthrough 2025, including her title at Melbourne Park in January. Keys' power vs. Siegemund's spins and slices offered quite a contrast in styles, and this outcome was surprisingly one-way traffic on a windy afternoon at No. 2 Court. The key statistic, undoubtedly, was this: Keys made 31 unforced errors, 20 more than Siegemund. Advertisement When it ended with one last backhand return from Keys that sailed wide, Siegemund smiled broadly, raised her arms and jumped up and down repeatedly. 'You can't not be happy when you beat a great player like Madison,' Siegemund said. How unexpected is this for Siegemund? Before this year, her career record at the All England Club was 2-5, and she'd never made it past the second round. Taking into account all four Grand Slam tournaments, she had reached the third round only once in 28 previous appearances, getting to the quarterfinals at the 2020 French Open. 'There is technically no pressure for me,' said Siegemund, at 37 the oldest woman remaining in the tournament. 'I try to remember that I only play for myself. I don't feel like I need to prove anything anymore. My boyfriend often tells me that.' On Sunday, the German faces another participant no one could have predicted would be at this stage of the grass-court major: 101st-ranked Solana Sierra of Argentina, who lost in qualifying and made it into the main draw when another player withdrew. World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka was too strong a foe for Britain's Emma Raducanu, despite the backing of the Centre Court crowd Friday night. HENRY NICHOLLS/AFP via Getty Images As for the women's top seed, Sabalenka fought back in both sets against the crowd favorite Raducanu, who had been playing some of her best tennis since her title run at Flushing Meadows as a qualifier at age 18. The fans provided extra energy for the British player, cheering wildly when Raducanu fired winners and exhaling 'aww!' when she missed. Sabalenka, a three-time Grand Slam champion, said she pretended the cheers were for her. 'Guys wow — what an atmosphere. My ears are still hurting. It was super loud,' she said in an on-court interview. Advertisement In the second set, Raducanu broke to 3-1 and led 4-1 at the 1-hour, 35-minute mark, but Sabalenka reeled off the last five games. 'She pushed me really hard to get this win. I'm happy to see her healthy and back on track,' Sabalenka said of her foe. 'I'm pretty sure that soon she's going to be back in the top 10.' Elsewhere Friday, Ben Shelton played for all of four points and about a minute, wrapping up his second-round match against Rinky Hijikata that was suspended Thursday night. Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz reached the fourth round by beating Jan-Lennard Struff in four sets. Other men's seeds advancing were No. 5 Taylor Fritz, No. 14 Andrey Rublev, and No. 17 Karen Khachanov. In the women's draw, four-time major title winner Naomi Osaka's Wimbledon ended in the third round for the third time, eliminated by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. No. 13 Amanda Anisimova of the US advanced to the fourth round, as did No. 24 Elise Mertens and No. 30 Linda Noskova. On Saturday's carrd, five-time Grand Slam champion Iga Swiatek will take on Danielle Collins at Centre Court — who could forget their testy exchange at the Paris Olympics? — while No. 1 Jannik Sinner and 24-time major champ Novak Djokovic also are involved in matches at the main stadium. Two American women will be in action at No. 1 Court: Hailey Baptiste faces No. 7 Mirra Andreeva of Russia, and No. 10 Emma Navarro plays defending champion Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic.

Aryna Sabalenka quells Emma Raducanu and Centre Court crowd to advance at Wimbledon
Aryna Sabalenka quells Emma Raducanu and Centre Court crowd to advance at Wimbledon

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Aryna Sabalenka quells Emma Raducanu and Centre Court crowd to advance at Wimbledon

THE ALL ENGLAND CLUB, LONDON — Aryna Sabalenka put her French Open troubles behind her Friday night by overcoming a hostile crowd and an at-times inspired Emma Raducanu to advance to the Wimbledon fourth round with a 7-6(6), 6-4 win. No one questions the world No. 1's ability, but the way she struggled in the French Open final against Coco Gauff when things started to go against her invited the possibility of a raucous atmosphere getting to her. She also lost to Gauff from a set up in the 2023 U.S. Open final, when she appeared overwhelmed by the support for her opponent. Advertisement Would the same thing happen to her at Wimbledon? The ingredients were there, as a raucous Friday night crowd roared their player on in hope of inspiring an upset and Raducanu, the world No. 40, did not look overawed. To set up this match, Raducanu defeated Markéta Vondroušová, the 2023 Wimbledon champion who had beaten Sabalenka ahead of Wimbledon in Berlin, and she looked to impose herself on the world No. 1 as she had Vondroušová. She ultimately fell short, but this is a performance that will give her a huge amount of confidence. She has lost to a top player for the third straight major, but this was nothing like the hammerings she received from Iga Świątek at the Australian Open and Roland Garros. This was the first appointment-viewing match of the tournament. The world No. 1 against the great home hope. Both Grand Slam champions, and despite the vast difference in ranking and career achievements, two of the biggest names in the sport. Throw in an 8 p.m. start on a Friday night and the crackling excitement was there from the start. Not since 1977 had a British woman beaten the top seed at Wimbledon. The odds weren't in Raducanu's favour, but how much did odds matter to a player who won the U.S. Open as an 18-year-old qualifier? Advertisement Raducanu needed to make a good start, to bring the crowd into the equation and see how Sabalenka would respond. She kept her end of the bargain with an early break, but was pegged back by a run of eight points in a row from her opponent that helped turn a 4-2 Raducanu lead into a 5-4 deficit. Then came one of the most dramatic games ever seen on this court. Sabalenka forced seven set points; Raducanu saved every single one, five of them with serves that forced Sabalenka into missed backhands. The noise that met Raducanu holding was so loud it sounded as though the reverberations would be felt beyond the 11 p.m. curfew. It got even louder a few minutes later when Raducanu broke again and had the chance to serve out the set. Memories of Heather Watson coming within two points of beating the world No. 1 Serena Williams on this court at the same stage on the same day of the tournament 10 years ago came flooding back. It was deafeningly loud then, and it was again now. 'Wow,' Sabalenka said of the atmosphere in her on-court interview. 'My ears are still hurting.' A seemingly frazzled Sabalenka broke back to force the tiebreak, but Raducanu forced a set point of her own at 6-5. At this point Sabalenka showed why she's the world No. 1, producing a stunning backhand drop shot that completely outfoxed her opponent. People focus on Sabalenka's fearsome power but it's the variety and comfort in adversity that she has added that has turned her from streaky into a serial champion. Advertisement A couple of points later, Sabalenka finally clinched the opener on what was her eighth set point. A vocal player normally, there was no sound from her this time, just a knowing look to her team. She acknowledged after that she needed to stay calm and not make the same mistakes she had made in Paris. It would have been easy for Raducanu to fade after losing a grueling 74-minute set, but she dug in and broke early in the second, racing to a 4-1 lead. Her aggressive returning always felt like her most plausible route to victory against Sabalenka's often vulnerable serve, and continuing to jump on it earned Raducanu a point for a double break 5-1 lead. Sabalenka saved it though, and then fended off two game points on the Raducanu serve to break back for 4-3. Tennis' scoring system can be a cruel mistress, but the best players seem to find a way to make it work for them. Sabalenka had the momentum and raced through the final three games. And it may only have been a third-round match against the world No. 40, but context is everything. This was a precious victory for Sabalenka, who had missed two of the past three Wimbledons. She is desperate to win here for the first time, just as she was at Roland Garros. She still has a long way to go to get there, with No. 24 seed Elise Mertens next, but whatever happens from here this was a significant victory for the world No. 1. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store