Jannik Sinner finally broke Carlos Alcaraz’s stranglehold, ending a five-match losing streak to his rival with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victory to win his first Wimbledon title — and become the first Italian, man or woman, to claim a singles crown at the All England Club.
Though the match didn’t quite match the drama of their French Open classic, it showcased Sinner’s relentless power game — big serves and booming groundstrokes — outlasting Alcaraz’s creativity and variety. The turning point came late in the second set, when Sinner produced a dazzling series of defensive winners to level the match at a set apiece.
This rivalry, increasingly one of the sport’s defining duels, plays out on two levels: the match itself, and a tactical chessboard of adjustments and countermoves. As always, it was gripping and unpredictable.
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Centre Court roared when Sinner faced two break points while serving at 4-3 in the fourth. With momentum potentially shifting to Alcaraz, Sinner held firm. What sets him apart, even more than his stroke-making, is his icy calm under pressure — a quality befitting his Alpine origins in South Tyrol.
Serving for the title at 5-4 — the same scenario where Alcaraz had denied him in Paris — Sinner didn’t blink. He outmaneuvered Alcaraz with precision, then sealed the title with his 38th unreturned serve.
By denying Alcaraz a third straight Wimbledon, Sinner joins elite company as only the sixth man to lift the trophy in the past 23 years.
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