ATP
Sinner seals his Alcaraz revenge with Wimbledon title
Jannik Sinner took his Grand Slam revenge on rival Carlos Alcaraz on Sunday, delivering a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 comeback triumph to win his first Wimbledon title five weeks after a painful French Open finals loss.
The Italian playing in his fourth straight final at a major won his second Slam trophy of the season after backing up his 2024 Australian Open title six months ago in Melbourne.
Alcaraz lost his chance for a Wimbledon hat-trick after winning the previous two editions.
Sinner had dropped five consecutive matches in the series with his fellow 22-year-old and now becomes the first Italian to lift the trophy here.

Last month in Paris, Alcaraz rallied from two sets to love down, overhauling Sinner while saving three match points in a five-and a half-hour thriller which meant heartbreak for the loser.
But the emotions were reversed on the grass of SW19.
“It was a tough loss mentally in Paris,” Sinner said, “But at the end of the day it doesn’t matter. We understood what was wrong and we worked on it.
“We accepted the loss, but kept on working – that’s why I’m holding the trophy here today.”

Day 14 Jannik Sinner( ITA) celebrates as he wins Men’s Singles Final beating Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) By Roger Parker
Sinner’s box was filled with his parents and brother which Spain’s king also attended to support his payer.
The winner said that closing out the win is always a challenge.
“In the last game I served really well. In best-of-five every moment can change the match.
“I’m happy I held my nerve.”
Sinner grabbed a break for 3-2 but became undone two games later with a break-back from Alcaraz, with the Spaniard capturing the opening set in 45 minutes as he won four straight games.
The Italian began the second set with a break as he worked to recover. The plan worked to perfection as Sinner squared the sets at one apiece with a running cross-court winner of set point..
Sinner took it in his stride when a champagne cork popped form a bottle and landed on the court as he was set to serve drew a rebuke to the Centre court crowd from the chair.
“That’s why we love playing here,” he joked post-match after being presented his trophy by Catherine, Princess of Wales, who watched along husband William, the prince.
“It’s a very expensive tournament.”
The top seed who will remain world No. 1 in Monday’s rankings took a tighter grip on the contest in the third set, frustrating his opponent with a break for 5-4 before serving into a two-set-to-one set lead.
The Alcaraz tension surfaced in the fourth set, with the Spaniard holding a nervous dialogue with his coach box as his momentum and body language faded slightly.
Sinner kept up the pressure with a love game for 1-all before breaking 2-1 with a return winner down the line.and following up with a second love game for a 3-1 lead.
The Italian top seed did not let up, threatening from 0-40 down as Alcaraz held on, 2-3 before Sinner took a 4-2 lead.
Sinner escaped a mini-crisis as he rescued two break points to climb to 5-3 before serving out on his second match point after three hours of play
“I would never have thought to be in this position” the player from Italy’s German-speaking north said.
“When I was young this was just a dream, it was so far away form where I’m from .”
Sinner’s win ended a 24-match win streak for Alcaraz and the Italian claimed his third Grand Slam title form the last four majors.
“It was difficult to lose, but I have to congratulate Jannik once again for a well-deserved trophy,” Alcaraz said after losing his first Grand Slam final out of six played.
‘I’m happy and proud of everything I’ve been doing. At the start of the season I struggled on and off the court.
But now I’m happy on court again, I feel excitement when I step on. it’s been a great journey so far and I want to keep it going,” the world No. 2 added.
Main photo:- Jannik Sinner lifts his first Wimbledon Trophy – by Roger Parker ISF
ATP
Sun shines as Zverev reaches Munich quarters
Alexander Zverev took a further step towards a defence of his 2025 title at the ATP Munich event with a comfortable 6-1, 6-2 hammering of Canada’s Gabriel Diallo on Thursday.
The German who won his only title of 2025 in his home nation faced an opponent carrying an injury in the 73-minute loss.
“I think he had some issues with his back and wasn’t serving fully in the second set anymore. Very unfortunate,” the 28-year-old world No. 3 said.
“Of course I am happy with the win and getting an easier match today.”
After days of cold weather, the spring sun finally made an appearance in the Bavarian capital.
Zverev advanced the the last eight with five breaks of serve and will bid fro a return to the semi-finals against fifth seed Francisco Cerundolo, a winner over Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-0.
“I played well from the baseline. I probably didn’t serve well in the first set, but it got better in the second. I am trying to improve every day,” the winner said as he reached a second straight quarter-final here..
Zverev has won their last four meetings.
“I’ve never beaten him on clay, which is his favourite surface, but I am definitely looking forward to the challenge,” Zverev said.
“I’m very happy to be at this stage, facing a tough opponent. That’s what it’s going to be tomorrow.”
Main photo:- Alexander Zverev with his 2025 Munich trophy
ATP
RG to retain the human touch in linecalling
Roland Garros will continue to buck the trend of electronic linecalling, with Grand Slam tournament boss Amelie Mauresmo laying down the law on Thursday in Paris.
Unlike the other three majors which have sent teams of line judges into early retirement, the clay major will stick with the tried and true for another edition beginning on May 24.
In addition to tradition, the skid marks left on the dirt by ball makes determining in or out subjective enough to often require a keen eye.
“They are not 100% reliable,” Mauresmo said of the electronic systems currently in use.“Our decision was to stick to our way.”
But the former WTA No. 1 suddenly flipped the script when it comes to the controversial suggestion that women should play best-of-five-sets at the four majors just like the men.
The idea has drawn scorn from top women, but that does not dissuade Mauresmo.
“You can’t change a format overnight to go from best of three to best of five. But if we think about it, would it be only the semifinal, the final, or for all matches?” the former Wimbledon champion said.
“This could be a win-win situation but we have to talk about this with the women players.”
The Wimbledon winner admitted that she had often yearned during her playing days for longer contests.
“When I did the Masters (season-ending) final ( 2005) I would have wanted to do the final in best of five. So maybe one day, you never know.”
The former player would not be drawns out on the dreaded night matches at Roland Garros, formerly a fully daytinem event.
“We will talk about scheduling when the time comes,” she said.“Nothing is closed and nothing is set in stone, it depends on the draws and the lineups.”
Also on the table are likely to be the distribution of night matches, with women barely registering in the night-tiem hours during the 2025 edition.
On the final Saturday there has been one change: The men’s doubles final will be played before the women’s singles final and not afterward.
“We will talk about scheduling when the time comes,” the TD said. “Nothing is closed and nothing is set in stone, it depends on the draws and the lineups.”
In the continuing prize money arms race among the four Grand Slams, Roland Garros announced a rise to a global USD 72 million in player payouts, a rise of USD 6.25 million.
ATP
Red alert for Alcaraz as wrist injury flares
Carlos Alcaraz quit the Barcelona Open with a wrist injury and cast serious doubt on his fitness and availability for run-up events prior to next month’s French Open.
The Spaniard who lost his No. 1 ranking to Jannik Sinner through Sunday’s loss to the Italian in the Monte Carlo Casters final was unable to carry on at his home event in Barcelona.
Alcaraz quit the clay event prior to his second-round match against Tomas Machac. The Spaniard injured his wrist in a first-round win over Finn Otto Virtanen and warned that he could make no solid commitment yet to furue play due to his injury.
“It’s with great sadness I have to go back home to start my recovery as soon as possible with my team, with the doctors, with the physio, and try to be as healthy as possible as soon as possible for (future) tournaments,” he said.
“Let’s hope, that you can see me back on a tennis court as soon as possible.”
Alcaraz is now touch and go for the Madrid Masters oddly starting in a week next Wednesday as the ATP stretches out the Masters events in an unpopular money-spinning exercise.
Alcarraz could face a serious hit to his ranking if he cannot front up in the Spanish capital and next month in Rome, with titles to defend in both venues.
“But I’ve seen today’s tests, and it’s a slightly more serious injury than we all expected.
“In the end I have to listen to my body, what won’t affect me later on: That’s why I have to withdraw from this tournament.
“I never like to withdraw from any tournament, but especially from this one,”
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