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Wimbledon
SportTennis

Sinner beats Zverev to retain Wimbledon title after marathon battle

The win placed Italy’s Sinner in rare company as the 10th man in ‌the professional era to successfully defend the title

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Italy’s Jannik Sinner holds the trophy after defeating Alexander Zverev of Germany in the men’s singles final at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Sunday. Photo: AP
Reuters

Jannik Sinner retained his Wimbledon ⁠title by beating ⁠Alexander Zverev 6-7 (7) 7-6 (2) 6-3 6-4 ⁠in the final on Sunday to claim his fifth grand slam crown and extend his dominance over the German to 10 straight victories.

The win placed the Italian in rare company as the 10th man in ‌the professional era to successfully defend the title, strengthening his credentials as one of the dominant players of his generation while he chases down big rival Carlos Alcaraz’s seven majors.

Both finalists slugged it out for 12 games in a high-octane first set on a warm and windy afternoon, before Zverev ⁠moved up a gear and hit a powerful forehand winner to clinch a gripping ‌tiebreak, yelling and crouching down in celebration.

Germany’s Alexander Zverev with the runner-up trophy after his final match against Sinner at Wimbledon on Sunday. Photo: Reuters
Germany’s Alexander Zverev with the runner-up trophy after his final match against Sinner at Wimbledon on Sunday. Photo: Reuters

The clean ball-striking continued but Zverev began to show signs of frustration late in the second ‌set, where a much more animated Sinner gained the upper hand in ⁠the tiebreak and ⁠went on to level the contest at one set apiece.

Zverev brought up his first break point midway ‌through the third set after more than two-and-a-half but slipped and fell to the ground after being ‌wrong-footed ‌by a Sinner drop shot. With Zverev screaming out in agony, the Centre ‌Court crowd gasped when he rolled on to his back clutching his right knee.

The second ⁠seed dusted himself off and carried on but was left seething when Sinner pounced ⁠in the next game to break for a 5-3 lead, slamming his racket to the floor, and soon found himself trailing the Italian two sets to one ‌after nearly three hours ‌of battle.

Sinner broke again for a 4-3 advantage in the fourth set as Zverev’s level briefly dipped, and the 24-year-old held firm in an entertaining spell to complete the victory and then collapsed to the threadbare turf in celebration.

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