
Wimbledon men's singles final: Why it's time to enjoy the Carlos Alcaraz versus Jannik Sinner rivalry
In truth, though, the golden generation was gone quite some time ago. For more than a decade, from the mid-2000s to the late-2010s, Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, and Roger Federer took this sport to new heights. Not individually but collectively, by nearly always meeting each other in the latter stages of Grand Slams and making the sport must-see viewing.
As they slowly faded, what tennis missed was not the number of Majors they were able to win, but the heightened sense of history and importance that was given to the big matches in which they faced off.
And last month, when Carlos Alcaraz defeated Sinner in a five-set epic in the French Open final by recovering from a two-set deficit and down double championship point, that sense somehow returned. The die-hards and the keen observers may have already known that the matchup can produce quality – their five-set quarterfinal at the 2022 US Open may well be the best tennis to be played this decade so far – but in their first Major final, they produced an astonishing match, with the level only rising as the tension grew too. Tennis became must-see viewing again.
No wonder, then, that since both began their march through the draw at the Championships this year, the clamour has been to watch a repeat of the titanic Parisian battle. It was never an unrealistic expectation; both players have pulled so far away from the rest of the tour that it would have been an anomaly had any player beaten them before they faced each other.
On Sunday, Alcaraz, the two-time defending champion, will play Sinner, the commanding World No.1, for the Wimbledon title. It will be the first time since Federer and Nadal's 2008 epic – widely considered the greatest tennis match of all time – that the same players will face off in the final in Paris and London back-to-back.
The script has flipped since the two players came into their match in Paris five weeks ago. Then it was Sinner who looked unflappable, and Alcaraz fallible. Now, the shine has come off Sinner's domination a bit, after he lost to an unseeded player at a grass tuneup and then was on the cusp of exiting this tournament in his freakish fourth round before his opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, was forced to pull out of the match due to an injury despite leading by two sets.
Alcaraz, though, has looked sublime. Even when pushed under pressure, he looks at ease, always going into another gear when required. A lesser player would have lost against the sprightly Taylor Fritz in their semifinal on Friday, but Alcaraz swatted him aside in four sets.
When on song, Sinner looks like a man on a mission. He flattens opponents through the draw like a mercenary snapping necks in an old-timey war film: ruthless and with cartoonish ease. But the one player that makes him look like a far cry from the best player in the world is Alcaraz. The Spaniard leads their head-to-head 8-4, but far more tellingly, he has won each of their last five matches, enough to occupy substantial space in Sinner's mind.
The reasons for that record are that he can, for the most part, contend with Sinner's power from the baseline and has more options to end points with his variegated artistry. His return of serve has also proved to be an effective weapon in unsettling Sinner's service rhythm.
Those are likely to be two key areas in which Sinner will need to come out on top to win his first Wimbledon title and reverse this recent run of poor form against the Spaniard. His serve will need to be both accurate and consistent to give Alcaraz as few opportunities as possible. And he cannot allow the rallies to go on too long – after which, just as he did in the French Open, Alcaraz can stroll into the forecourt, away from Sinner's comfort zone of the baseline, and take control with his deft touches at the net, and mix in his slices and drop shots.
When Plan A fails, Sinner must find Plan B or C. Alcaraz is in no need of improvements in that area.
Either way the match goes, though, expect the Centre Court crowd to be on their feet. A new rivalry for a new era; it's enough to get even the tragic nostalgics up and excited.
11: Carlos Alcaraz becomes just the 11th player in the history of Open Era men's tennis to reach a third consecutive Wimbledon final. The other 10 players: John Newcombe, Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe, Boris Becker, Stefan Edberg, Pete Sampras, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic. With a victory, he will join Borg, Sampras, Federer and Djokovic as the only players to win Wimbledon thrice back-to-back.
11: By reaching Sunday's final, Jannik Sinner became just the 11th player to have reached the final of each of the four Grand Slam tournaments in the Open Era. He is the second-youngest, after Jim Courier, to complete the feat. The Italian is also just the fifth player, after Rod Laver, Andre Agassi, Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic, to reach four Major finals in a row.

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Hindustan Times
26 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Jannik Sinner slams door on Carlos Alcaraz's bid to match Roger Federer's Grand Slam legacy
Jannik Sinner got his French Open revenge on Sunday, defeating Carlos Alcaraz in four sets in the Wimbledon 2025 final. The Italian won 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, clinching his fourth Grand Slam title. The defeat also saw Alcaraz fail to match Roger Federer's record streak of winning his first seven Grand Slam finals, with the Spaniard having five consecutive wins. Carlos Alcaraz failed to match Roger Federer's record.(AP) Alcaraz earlier won two titles at Roland Garros, two in London and one in New York. In his sixth Grand Slam final, he lost to Sinner, and failed to maintain his 100 percent success rate. Speaking on his rivalry with Sinner, Alcaraz said in his post-match press conference, 'I just am really, really happy about having this rivalry with him. I think it's great for us and it is great for tennis. Every time we play against each other, I think our level is really high. I think we don't watch a level like this, 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.' 'I think, as I said many, many times, this rivalry is getting better and better. We're building a really great rivalry because we're playing finals of Grand Slams, finals of Masters – the best tournaments in the world. It's going to be better and better. I am just really grateful for that because it gives me the opportunity to just give my 100 per cent every practice, every day, just to be better, thanks to that. The level that I have to maintain and I have to raise if I want to beat Jannik is really high,' he added. Alcaraz also has one more Grand Slam title than Sinner (four). The Italian won the 2024 and 2025 Australian Open, 2024 US Open and now Wimbledon 2025.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Wimbledon: Jannik Sinner breaks the Carlos Alcaraz barrier with lessons from the past
What doesn't kill you makes you strongerJannik Sinner may be the World No. 1, but heading into the Wimbledon 2025 final, few genuinely believed he could topple Carlos odds were stacked high against the Italian. Alcaraz had won 20 straight matches at Wimbledon, a streak that included two consecutive titles. He arrived at the final on the back of a 24-match unbeaten run since returning from injury at the Italian Open. Most daunting of all, he had beaten Sinner five times in a row, dating back to their 2023 Beijing Fans hadn't forgotten how Alcaraz had dismantled Novak Djokovic - a 24-time Grand Slam winner - in straight sets in last year's final. Every stat, every memory, every narrative pointed to another Alcaraz 2025 men's singles final HighlightsBut sport has a way of defying expectations - and on this occasion, it delivered something truly over three hours later, it was Sinner who stood triumphantly on Centre Court, clutching the Wimbledon trophy, while Alcaraz settled for the runner-up plate. Under suffocating pressure, and up against a rival who had seemed untouchable, Sinner delivered a performance for the ages - a commanding 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 win that carved his name into Wimbledon a French Open repeatJust over a month ago, Sinner stood on the brink of his first Grand Slam title at Roland Garros. He had taken the first two sets against Alcaraz and looked destined to lift the trophy. The finish line was in sight - he could almost taste it. But what he didn't see coming was destiny's ever the fighter, thrives when his back is to the wall. On that Paris evening, he clawed his way back, saving multiple championship points in the fourth set before winning in five - in what became the second-longest Grand Slam final in forward to Sunday at Wimbledon. The script felt eerily familiar. Sinner was two sets to one up, and Alcaraz again stood in a position where he'd have to win the fourth and fifth to retain his crown. Given his scorching form - unbeaten in 24 matches since returning from injury - no one would've been surprised if the Spaniard forced a decider. Many expected it. But this time, Sinner had other Italian had already let one slip - he earned an early break in the opening set but faltered, dropping serve twice to hand it over. From that point on, though, he was unshakeable. Sinner locked didn't allow Alcaraz a single break across the next three sets - even when he faced break points deep in the fourth. When he held firm in that tense game, you could sense the shift. There would be no miracle comeback, no fifth-set drama. Sinner wasn't letting this one time, it was Sinner's turn to let destiny unfold - on his work harderNeedless to say, the French Open loss was a bitter pill to swallow for Sinner. Coming so close to his maiden Grand Slam title on clay, only to see it slip away, could have broken his spirit. But instead of retreating into his shell, Sinner rose - like a phoenix from the took the pain, the lessons, and the heartbreak from Roland Garros and transformed them into fuel. With renewed purpose and steely determination, he arrived at Wimbledon not just to compete, but to conquer."Honestly, mostly emotionally. I had a very tough loss in Paris, and at the end of the day, whether you win or lose - especially at the big tournaments - what really matters is how you respond," Sinner said in the on-court interview after the match."We tried to accept that loss, to learn from it, and to work harder. That's exactly what we did. And it's one of the reasons I'm holding this trophy now. I'm just so grateful to be healthy, to have great people around me - that's the most important thing. Holding this trophy means so much," Sinner Sunday's final, it was Sinner who had stunned Alcaraz at Wimbledon back in 2022 - a statement win that hinted at what was to come. Three years later, he did it again, reinforcing his edge over the Spaniard on the grass of SW19. Interestingly, Sinner now holds a 2-0 record against Alcaraz at the grass-court this triumph, Sinner was seen as a hard-court specialist - his three Grand Slam titles coming at the Australian Open and the US Open. But with this latest victory at Wimbledon, he has added another surface to his growing only one piece is missing: clay. With fire in his belly and four majors already in the bag, Sinner will no doubt turn his eyes to Roland Garros next year, chasing the final jewel in his Grand Slam crown.- Ends


News18
an hour ago
- News18
'He's Going To Come For Us Again': Jannik Sinner Feels Carlos Alcaraz Rivalry Heating Up
Last Updated: With the triumph at SW19, Sinner banished the demons of the French Open final, in which Alcaraz fought back from two sets down to clinch the title at Roland Garros. World No.1 Jannik Sinner dethroned Carlos Alcaraz in the final of Wimbledon 2025 as the Italian rallied to a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 triumph in the summit clash at the AELTC on Sunday. With the triumph at SW19, Sinner banished the demons of the French Open final, in which Alcaraz fought back from two sets down to clinch the title at Roland Garros. Sinner, who looks to keep improving with time, acknowledged that Alcaraz holds the advantage over him in certain aspects and that he would have to be ready to fend off the Spaniard when they clash again going forward. 'I don't think I'm at my best because at 23 I don't think you can be in your best shape ever. So hopefully I can keep improving," the Wimbledon champion said. 'I keep looking up to Carlos because even today I felt like he was doing couple of things better than I did," Sinner revealed. 'That's something we will work on and prepare ourselves because he's going to come for us again. We have a big target on us, so we have to be prepared," the Italian added. The win proved to be Sinner's first over Alcaraz since 2023 as the Spaniard had managed to win the last five encounters against the Italian heading into the final day at Wimbledon. But Sinner's triumph at the fabled grass court Major over the World No.2 would serve as a moment of catharsis. 'It is important, for sure, because you know, when you lose several times against someone, it's not easy. But in the same time in the past I felt that I was very close," Sinner said. 'I never pushed myself down. I felt like I did something great because it has been not easy. Coming here and winning Wimbledon, it has been amazing," he said. Sinner had maintained that he wouldn't let the Roland Garros setback affect him frame of mind at the All England Club and stayed true to his word as he held his nerve to claw his way back from a deficit against Alcaraz in the final. 'This is the part where I'm the proudest because it really has not been easy. I always tried to be honest with myself and had the self-talk. You know, what if, what if? I tried to accept it, in a way," the 23-year-old said. 'Even if I don't cry, it feels emotional because only me and the people who are close to me know exactly what we have been through on and off the court, and it has been everything except easy," he reflected. 'We've tried to push, you know, every practice session, even I was struggling at times mentally." 'That's why I also said after Roland Garros that it's not the time to put me down, no, because another Grand Slam is coming up, and I did great here," Sinner beamed. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.