But in Sinner’s case, he is able to generate so much power through his hips and racquet head speed that he is happy to sacrifice some pace in the name of pinpoint placement. Players will often ...
Sinner won his second Australian Open title, cementing his place as the best in the world. Will he get only better from here?
10d
Tennis World on MSNWatch: Alexander Zverev betrayed by his racket in Buenos AiresWhile practicing with Tomas Etcheverry on the center court of Buenos Aires, Zverev literally broke the frame of his Head ...
Their rackets flail independently from their hands ... A double fault, 30-15, and has that got in his head?! Sinner responds to a bit of a nothing backhand with a drop shot but instantly knows ...
Jannik Sinner cruised to his second straight Australian Open title and third major overall, beating Alexander Zverev in a one-sided final.
Jannik Sinner overpowered Alexander Zverev in a clinical win, while Madison Keys delivered a fearless performance to halt Aryna Sabalenka.
Zverev walked back behind the baseline, shaking his head while talking ... on the court and used a racket to hit another on the sideline. Understandable, given what Sinner was doing on the other ...
The first, thanks to a passing shot, put Sinner ahead 5-4 after 44 minutes, and Zverev walked back behind the baseline, shaking his head while talking ... and dropped his racket on an equipment ...
Sinner clinched the set 7-6(4), leaving a frustrated Zverev smashing his racket. Winner Jannik Sinner ... he leads their head-to-head 4-3 but holds a poor record (1-13) against top-five opponents.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results