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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Cincinnati Open: Italian world No.1 Jannik Sinner feels he needs to improve

Australian Open champion Sinner, who leads the ATP Tour with four titles this season, was limping at times but dug deep to dispatch the 2021 Cincinnati champion in three hours and seven minutes

Reuters Cincinnati Published 20.08.24, 10:55 AM
Jannik Sinner hits a return during his semi-final match against Alexander Zverev at the Cincinnati Open on Sunday.

Jannik Sinner hits a return during his semi-final match against Alexander Zverev at the Cincinnati Open on Sunday. Reuters

Italian world No.1 Jannik Sinner played through a nagging hip issue to beat Germany’s Alexander Zverev 7-6(9), 5-7, 7-6(4) on Sunday and reach the final of the Cincinnati Open where he will face Frances Tiafoe.

Australian Open champion Sinner, who leads the ATP Tour with four titles this season, was limping at times but dug deep to dispatch the 2021 Cincinnati champion in three hours and seven minutes.

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“It means a lot to me. It’s a very different moment, what I’m going through, so I’m very happy about this result,” Sinner said in an on-court interview. “The physical aspect, of course, I have to improve, because if I want to win grand slams or a bigger title, I have to be, for sure, more in shape.

“But I just tried to stay there mentally, which I’m very proud (of), and let’s see what’s coming tomorrow.” Sinner was seen grabbing his right hip occasion ally.

“I have to check on my hip after this tournament here,” Sinner said.

Zverev was three points away from serving out the opener but Sinner broke to level at 5-5 before they headed to a rain-interrupted tie-break where the Italian secured the frame on his third set point with a backhand volley.

The players exchanged early breaks in the second set but German world number four Zverev held to love to go 6-5 up and then levelled the match in the next game when Sinner sent a forehand smash into the net.

Neither player faced a break point in a tightly contested decider that required a tiebreak where Sinner took control, dropping just one point on his serve and sealing the match when Zverev sent a backhand long. “I think we both raised our level when it counted,” Sinner said.

In the other semi-final, unseeded Tiafoe beat Danish 15th seed Holger Rune 4-6, 6-1, 7-6(4) to reach the biggest final of his career.

Rune got the only break of the first set to go 5-4 up and then served out the frame before Tiafoe stormed through the second stanza in 25 minutes to force a decider.

The Dane raced out to a 5-2 lead but Tiafoe then followed a routine service hold with a break to love and then saved two match points on his serve to get to 5-5.

The players went on to a tiebreak that ended when Rune sent a shot long.

With the win, Tiafoe becomes the first American to reach the final since John Isner in 2013.

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