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In early June, Jannik Sinner suffered the sort of defeat that could cause years of psychological damage. He squandered three ...
Ahead of this year’s US Open, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have only reinforced their positions as the best two players ...
Sinner wins the next point, too, slapping a crosscourt forehand which Alcaraz can’t return. But the Spaniard locates an ace to reach 30-30.This feels like a really pivotal moment in the final ...
The distinctive sound of Jannik Sinner's forehand can make a crowd gasp. And it's his not-so-secret tool in any match.
According to TennisViz, a company that analyzes the ATP Tour, the speed of Sinner's forehand has remained remarkably similar ever since he broke onto the Tour. At an average of 78 mph, it's 5 ...
Sinner’s forehand. According to stats from Craig O’Shannessy, Djokovic’s former analyst, Sinner hit 65 forehand winners en route to the quarterfinals — with only 69 errors committed off ...
And then there is the sound of a Jannik Sinner forehand. The Italian's groundstrokes are the bedrock of his game, the power and speed of his shots keeping his opponents under pressure throughout.
Sinner fell to his back as the latest of his magnificently crisp forehand blows landed into the corner to seal a staggering escape, 3-6 3-6 6-4 6-4 6-3 in three hours and 44 minutes.
Sinner ended the Australian Open in the exact manner he had started it, slapping a ball straight through the defences of a helpless opponent. Sinner powered his way past Zverev to a dominant 6-3 ...
In the sixth game of the fifth set, Sinner had triple breakpoint against a fatiguing Medvedev. He missed with his first chance but converted with his next, a forehand winner, for a 4-2 lead.
The distinctive sound of Jannik Sinner's forehand can make a crowd gasp. And it's his not-so-secret tool in any match.