Jannik Sinner wins first Wimbledon title with four-set victory over Carlos Alcaraz – as it happened
Otherwise, though, Tumaini Carayol’s report is with us:So all that remains is for me to wish you all peace and love.Peace and love!Before we say goodbye, though, look at what we’re bringing you this evening!So that’s Wimbledon done for another year and, as every year, what a year it’s been, with upsets, epics and fun all over the show.If anyone’s any idea what we can do tomorrow, let me know – OK, I don’t mean that, we’ve got the Test to comfort us and assuage our grief – but otherwise we’re almost done here.Sinner poses for photos, enjoying the moment – though I wonder if relief is the predominant emotion.Either way, his victory is what the game needed – as Andy Roddick noted of his matches against Roger Federer, a rivalry is only a rivalry if both players win titles.
I can’t wait to see where this goes next, as both men contemplate how to improve themselves and how to pick apart the other.Sinner, the first Italian to win Wimbledon, begins with Alcaraz, praising an amazing tournament “and for the player you are”.He too kvels in the joy of their friendship, adding that he’ll win more of these and already has two.“It’s so special,” he says, seeing his parents, his brother and his team, adding that his brother is only in attendance because there’s no F1 race this weekend.Asked about what he’s put himself through to win this trophy, his admits that emotionally, it’s been a lot, following his tough loss in Paris, but ultimately it doesn’t matter how you win or lose, you have to accept the result and work out what you did wrong.
He and his team did that, which is one of the reasons he’s now holding the trophy.He’s grateful that he’s heatlhy and has great people around him.Otherwise, he says he served out the last game very well having survived tough moments in his previous service game, and he’s very happy he held his nerve.Then, asked about the champagne cork that landed near him, he laughs that only at Wimbledon could that happen, which is why we all love it.Back in the days when he was young, he never thought he could get to this moment, “the dream of the dream” – that’s a lovely turn of phrase – and in conclusion, he again thanks his team and everyone who came out for this special occasion.
They give him so any emotions and he keeps pushing, trying to become a better tennis player but mostly a better person.”Finally, he thanks the ball kids and the fans, then off he goes, the new Wimbledon champion.He and Alcara are very different characters and players, opposites in many way, and yet it’s impossible not to love them both, united by the rare and inspiring quality of their absolute menschlichkeit.“It’s hard to lose,” says Alcaraz, experiencing the aching desolation for the first time in a major final.So he congratulates Sinner with a huge smile, saying his opponent and team deserve it.
He’s happy for him, tells him to keep it going, and he’s happy to build a great relationship off the court as well as on it, that pushes him to improve every day.Otherwise, he’s really proud of everything he’s doing.At the start of the season he struggled on the court but suddenly he rediscovered himself and the happiness he has on the court, thanking his family and pledging to “keep bringing joy.”He loves playing at Wimbledon, he loves the “insane” atmosphere, and he’ll be back.Finally, he thanks the King of Spain for coming to support him, and off he goes.
Alcaraz comes to collect his runners-up trophy, raising it to cheers from the crowd.He wins well, and he also loses well – his parents must be so proud of the boy they’ve raised.And now it’s Sinner’s go – he receives the trophy from Kate and of the seven billion people in the world, he ranks no 1 for current happiness.Alcaraz played poorly today, but I’m sure he’ll acknowledge he was also out-played and out-thought.Sinner gave him less of what he wanted, taking away much of what he does best, and he couldn’t work out how to combat him.
Now it’s the Spaniard’s turn to re-evaluate and find a tweak; I can’t wait to see what he comes back with,Sinner slumps on to his haunches, slapping the grass to let out all the pain and frustration that’s lived with him every day since Paris,Now, it is part of the richness of his life – without that, would he have this? He races up to his box, sharing moments with his family and team – they’ll have been with him through the suffering, will have sacrificed in the hope that one day, they might enjoy exactly what they’re enjoying now,Sinner now knows he can win on grass, against Alcaraz; Alcaraz now knows he can lose finals, to Sinner; we’ve always known these two were going to give us many, many days like this,So far, this match has been a triumph for Sinner’s mentality, strategy and execution; can he hold it down? Alcaraz shanks a forehand wide for 15-0, then big serve facilitates a backhand winner for 30-o; the world no 1 is two points away.
He seizes the first with two terrific volleys in succession, Alcaraz sprinting and sliding in desperation, and Sinner has three match points; he’s been here before! We’ve all been here before! Can he land a first serve? He cannot, and when he nets a backhand, he’ll be feeling the weight of the desolation, past and future,But what counts is the moment; can he stay in it? YOU BET HE CAN! AN ACE DOWN THE T AND JANNIK SINNER WINS WIMBLEDON FOR THE FIRST TIME! WHAT A PERFORMANCE, AND WHAT A MOMENT AFTER EVERYTHING THAT HAPPENED IN PARIS! A beautiful affirming moment after who knows how many long nights of the soul! Sport!Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 5-4 Alcaraz* Sinner won’t want the pressure of serving for the championship if he can avoid it, and a gigantic forehand earns him 15-all, but another falls long; 30-15,But a battery of ferocious forehands takes him two points away from inexplicable, indescribable ecstasy at 30-all … then Alcaraz serves out his hold, noising up the crowd as he seeks to get himself in the frame of mind he needs to save himself with a break,The players sit down and Sinner has a few second to pretend the enormity of the situation is a lie,Good luck with that, old mate.
*Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 5-3 Alcaraz Alcaraz has two more chances to save himself and his dream of joining Bjorn Borg, Pete Sampras, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic as men who’ve won Wimbledon three times in a row.He’ll know he may never get another go at this, or at least anyone normal would; on reflection, there’s a pretty good chance he doesn’t.Anyroad up, he makes 0-15 then, at 15-all,Sinner frames a forehand; in front of his eyes pass the words ROLAND GARROS, his world swimming just a touch.And when he goes long again, this time on the backhand, Alcaraz has two break-back points, suddenly back in the match, and I’ve no idea how Sinner can even raise his arms, the most desperate match of his life threatening to reincarnate.But a well-directed second serve, kicking out wide, surprises the champ, who can’t control his return – the clarity of Sinner’s thinking under pressure is perhaps the key difference in this final – and when Alcaraz strays long, we move to deuce.
Was that his chance? Perhaps! Sinner steps inside the line, unloading the suitcase on a backhand that forces a long riposte, and a second serve down the T, high-kicking and just about unreturnable, ends a fantstic game,Sinner is an absolute brute, and he’s a game away from the win of his life redeeming the loss of his life; what a life!Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 4-3 Alcaraz* Sinner may be over what happened in Paris, but it seems unlikely it’s on all of our minds, but totally absent from his,Nevertheless he’s playing with such confidence now, like he knows he’s going to win and, in the process, steal from us our five-set thriller; how dare he,And at 30-all on the Alcaraz serve, he’s trying to get it done quickly, only to net a forehand when well in the rally; a beautiful serve-volley point from the champ secures the game, the crowd increasingly febrile,What is at stake is at stake, and for Sinner to win, he’ll have to reconcile that fact with his sense of self: he should win, but he might lose.
*Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 4-2 Alcaraz Sinner won’t be thinking about much more than the next point, but if he could win here, he’d change the complexion of men’s tennis and his career; currently, Alcaraz is 5-0 from finals, and until he loses one, no one will fully believe it to be possible.Shonuff, he makes 0-15 … only to wham a forehand into the tape after unleashing a decent return, a costly and unnecessary error in the circumstances that evidences the champ’s state of mind and game.An ace follows, then a cunning body-serve on second delivery – at the moment, almost every decision he’s making is the right decision – but he soon drops long on the backhand, then serves long, upping the tension … then, at 40-30, he sticks a forehand into the tape … and the ball clambers over and drops like a stone! Alcraaz feels the world is against him, and he’s running out of opportunities to remind it who he is.Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 3-2 Alcaraz* No one enjoys a tennis match more than Alcaraz, his game suffused with compelling, affirming, contagious joy.But he’s not enjoying his performance today, apparently mystified by his inability to execute as he usually does.
For that, though, he can only blame his opponent – Sinner has grown as the match has deepened, two terrific points turning 40-0 into 40-30; the champ can’t work out what’s going wrong, nor can he do the basics to his usual standard.A netted backhand underlines the problem, and at deuce momentum feels inexorable, regardless of who takes this game.And it’s Sinner who’s the protagonist in the next rally, hammering a forehand marginally long; from there, Alcaraz secures his hold, but he’s having to fight for everything while the game is coming easily to the world no 1.But as long as he’s only one break down, he’s still in the match.*Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 3-1 Alcaraz Sinner, though, is under no illusions – Rasputaraz can come back from any position, and no one knows it better and more agonisingly than he does.
But he’s flying here, you so confident in his movements, thinking with clarity and executing with bravery, conviction and purpose.He consolidates his break for 3-1 … which means any subsequent loss wold sting even harder.The stakes area stratospheric, how will our players respond?Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 2-1 Alcaraz* At 15-0, a double invites Sinner into the game while, in comms, they lament the disappearnace of his slice backhand, all the more so given how well it worked for Dimitrov when he played Sinner, the low bounce denying him the height he needs to unleash.And an error hands over 15-30, Alcaraz restoring parity with a booming forehand … but then the ball bounces up when he’s forced to play with too much elevation, Sinner annihilating a backhand winner for break point and, offered a go at a second serve … HE CARESSES A GORGEOUS BACKHAND RETURN DOWN THE LINE! Jannik Sinner is out-thinking the champ here, denying him what he does well, and he’s four holds away from the title!*Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 1-1 Alcaraz Sinner quickly makes 30-0, and from there he holds to love.He’s serving and hitting with authority now, executing his skills are planned; Alcaraz is still searching, the match not going as he planned.
A third consecutive title feels a way away.Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 0-1 Alcaraz* How many more of these matches are we going to see over the next decade? We’re trying to live in the moment, but in acknowledging the beauty of it, we’re necessarily forced to consider its lasting significance, enjoyment uplifted by anticipation.At 15-all, Alcaraz outlasts Sinner from the back, moving him about as we discussed at the start but as has perhaps been forgetten in the maelstrom of the match – the champ has played as he likes, more than as is prudent.He secures his hold, and might it be that, down in the match, he is now dialled-in in a way he hasn’t yet been today?*Sinner 4-6 6-4 6-4 Alcaraz At 15-all, a double ratchets the tension up several more levels; an ace tamps it down a little.Another fine point – big serve, wide forehand, overhead – makes 40-15 and two set points, Sinner’s even ultraer-aggressive approach paying dividends … and he closes out the set with a service winner! He’s a set away from redeeming his French Open heart-devastation with Wimbledon glory!Sinner 4-6 6-4 5-4 Alcaraz* An ace at 0-15 levels the game, but a return on to the baseline forces Alcaraz to balloon his riposte long; naturally, an ace restores parity at 30-all.
But a fantastic return, backhand down the line, allows the clean-up backhand at net, and Sinner has break point; these are the days of his life … and he makes them his, nailing a return on second serve, then finishing into the space as Alcaraz drops his response short.Sinner has the break and after a little sit-down will serve for the third set! Sat in his seat, Alacraz chunters to himself – he’s not playing well here.Welcome to under the pump, population You.*Sinner 4-6 6-4 4-4 Alcaraz Not if Sinner keeps playing points like this, directing Alcaraz about the court and this time dispatching his overhead.And though a netted backhand levels the game, Alcaraz then picks a drop with the point at his mercy, allowing sinner to clobber a forehand on to the outermost fibre of the sideline; sometimes, you can have too many options.
And Alcaraz quickly forgets his oversight, a drop-lob combo-move making 30-all, and now he has a look at a second serve … for the all the good it does him, a swinger out wide leaping off the grass for an ace.This might be the aspect of the game that’s improved most in the last year or two, and to underline the point, another ace, this time achieved in the more accustomed first-delivery manner, secures a vital hold.We’re at the business end of set three, the tension near-sickening.Sinner 4-6 6-4 3-4 Alcaraz* Up 30-0, Alcaraz lands a serve on to the line and Sinner can’t get it back; an ace curled on to the T follows, and that was exactly the kind of the hold the champ needed; can he convert the good vibes into the kind of streak that’ll give him a breaking opportunity?*Sinner 4-6 6-4 3-3 Alcaraz After another partly-forced error gives Alcaraz 15-all, an ace restores Sinner’s advantage … but he then bangs a forehand wide, upping the tension at 30-all.Then, at 40-30, the Italian finds himself caught at net after picking Alcaraz’s side with a putaway; he responds with a tweener, up goes the lob … and he clouts his overhead unnecessarily hard and wide.
That, mates, is pressure, doing too much to make sure … so Sinner gathers and, I short order, closes out his hold.The standard remains variable, the intensity stratospheric.Sinner 4-6 6-4 2-3 Alcaraz* A longer rally to open the game, Sinner netting a forehand for 0-15.But a drop into the net suggests Alcaraz is struggling for clarity as he sometimes he does; a forehand that falls wide for 30-all does too.Chance for Sinner, who then gets great depth on return … only to go long from the back when well in the rally.
That’s a missed opportunity, though it’s worth noting that the athleticism and presence of Alcaraz on the other side of the net can make what, against anyone else, would be an unforced error, into one that’s partially forced,From there, the champ closes out, and it feels like the next few games will decide this match,If Sinner takes the set, he’s favourite; if Alcaraz does, you’d not bet on him losing two on the spin with the title at stake,*Sinner 4-6 6-4 2-2 Alcaraz An unreturned serve makes 15-0 and Sinner shakes racket at his box – he believes he can do this, and knows how important this set is,From there, he closes out a love hold, removing the pressure from himself and placing it upon Alcaraz in little more than a minute.
Sinner 4-6 6-4 1-2 Alcaraz* A forehand cross, hit flat and wide, again turns Alcaraz’s strength against him – he wants to be hitting his own forehand from the middle, not from out in the stands,But though the champ soon makes 30-15, a backhand drops long for 30-all, and this feels like Sinner’s chance: he needs to cash in when in the ascendancy,But in this game, he cannot, Alcaraz securing his hold, and this match continues to stutter, of far lower standard than the final in Paris,But fear not, friends – we’ve time,*Sinner 4-6 6-4 1-1 Alcaraz If Alcaraz wins this set, you’ll fancy him to close it out; if Sinner does, you still might, which would make no difference to anything save for the fact the players will probably understand things in the same way.
My sense is that it’s Sinner currently playing the better tennis, and he secures an impressive hold to 15, sealed with an ace then a terrifying forehand winner.Sinner 4-6 6-4 0-1 Alcaraz* Unusually for players this insanely driven and talented, we’re not getting periods of one in the ascendancy, we’re getting points.Which makes it so difficult to predict what’s going to happen next, but why would we even want to when we can just enjoy? Meantime, Alcaraz – who, let’s not forget was broken in the first game of set two, perhaps losing focus after the relief of winning it – finds himself down 0-30, and he’ll be fearing a repeat performance.All the more so when, at 15-30, he sends down a tame double … then saves break point no 1 with an ace down the T … and no 2 when a Sinner forehand goes long; the Italian will be disappointed he didn’t make more of the second serve offered him.From there, Alcaraz serves out the game, putting an exclamation mark on things with an ace; can he parlay his opponent’s disappointment into something more tangible?*Sinner 4-6 6-4 Alcaraz This is a proper test of nerve for Sinner, and we can be sure Alcaraz will look to exploit that by making him play.
But just as it looks like the first point of the game is his, a backhand down the line forcing Sinner to stretch eveything just to get the ball back, the follow-up drop, when a whack into space would do,and allows the Italian to charge in and flick back a winner; fantastic behaviour,And though we’re soon at 15-all, Sinner goes wide on the second serve then finds the thump he needs to force it home, and when Alcaraz turns up the volume with a forehand to the corner, Sinner responds with an absolute humdinger, cleansed hard and flat down the line! That is wondrous, but on 40-15 he’s sent nashing off to the sideline … only to conjure a table-tennis winner cross-court to break the sideline! That is absolutely absurd conduct from Sinner; he didn’t take that set, he seized it,Sinner 4-6 5-4 Alcaraz* A high-kicker out wide … and ace,Alcaraz has so much variety on serve, so much that so another of the same genre, but on second delivery, also leaps away from Sinner for an ace,And though, at 40-0, a drop can’t quite clamber over the tape, another ace, sent jumping out wide, forces the Italian to serve for the set.
If he can manage it, he’s in business; if he cannot, you’ll fear for him.*Sinner 4-6 5-3 Alcaraz A love hold for Sinner, and he’s a game away from the second set.Sinner 4-6 4-3 Alcaraz* Alcaraz is holding the easier now, but at 40-0 a poor drop allows Sinner in to feed a backhand pass into the corner.And when another ball catches the line expectedly, he forces the error for 40-30 and a double brings us to deuce.If this is Alcaraz losing concentration, as sometimes he does, this is Sinner’s cue to jump on him, and when a double donates advantage he has a chance to near-enough secure the second set … only to net a backhand return when handed a second serve.
And from there, an ace and a service winner box off the game; if the Italian wants to level the match, he’ll have to do it himself, parity won’t be presented to him.*Sinner 4-6 4-2 Alcaraz A drop into the net hands Sinner 15-0, but at 15-all he runs around his backhand only to drop long.He does, though, soon make 30-all, a service winner raises game point, and a felicitous net cord turns a poor shot into a winner.The apology is moving in its sincerity.“Since you’re asking,” says Richard Hirst, “1969, a free concert in Parliament Hill Fields, with Soft Machine, Procul Harum, Yes (before even their first album) and others.
Also the summer I went to Wimbledon (note the impressive linking) for the one and only time: Centre Court to see Pancho Gonzalez against Charlie Pasarell in what was at the time the longest match at Wimbledon.”My school sports day was there, the teachers grassed me to my parents for enjoying a Dunhill International in the bushes.Sinner 4-6 3-2 Alcaraz* Words we’ve not required for a while: a love hold.Alcaraz isn’t playing especially well, but if the match is a longun, you get the sense he will at some point and in the meantime, he leads.*Sinner 4-6 3-1 Alcaraz There were signs of improvement but for now, it remains the case that neither man is at it, Sinner dominating a point before netting his putaway for 30-all; pressure