Jannik Sinner has won three of the previous five Major events! World no. 1 conquered two Australian Open crowns and completed his hard-court domination with the US Open trophy. Not stopping there, the 23-year-old is ready to taste the victory on clay and grass this season!
Winning the first Major title is never easy. However, stepping in and defending it a year later is even harder! Jannik Sinner achieved that at this year's Australian Open, continuing where he left a year ago and extending his Melbourne reign.
Unstoppable Jannik Sinner’s biggest opponent is now outside the court - As the World No 1 looks to become the ‘complete player’ after defending his Australian Open title, a hearing at the Court of Arb
Jannik Sinner's victory at the 2025 Australian Open was so impressive that it left fans and insiders speechless. The world number 1 is clearly the best on hard courts and seems to be able to extend his dominance on other surfaces as well,
It gave Sinner such a strong boost that he became the strongest link in men's tennis! The Italian dethroned Novak Djokovic after Roland Garros, becoming the 29th world no. 1 in ATP history. Jannik wrapped up the year with a 73-6 score and eight ATP trophies.
Among them: the Italian has now won his last 10 matches in a row against Top 10 players in straight sets, the first man to do that since ATP rankings began in 1973.
Jannik Sinner has been the number one in the men's ranking since last June. The decisive moment was the semifinal at the last Roland Garros, which handed him the leadership in the rankings for
Facing Sinner reminded Alexander Zverev of trying to solve the challenge presented by the 24-time major champion Djokovic.
Jannik Sinner retained his Australian Open title with an emphatic 6-3 7-6(4) 6-3 win over Alexander Zverev on Sunday, breaking new ground for Italian tennis and leaving his German rival smarting after a third Grand Slam final defeat.
MELBOURNE, Australia — Jannik Sinner beat Alexander Zverev 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-3 in the Australian Open final at Melbourne Park Sunday. The No. 1 seed prevailed over the No. 2 seed in a match ultimately decided by Zverev’s discomfort when coming forward, Sinner’s underrated first serve, and a kiss of death from the net.
Jannik Sinner beat Alexander Zverev 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-3 on Sunday at the Rod Laver Arena to successfully defend the Australian Open trophy. He became the first male player since Rafael Nadal in 2006 to defend his maiden Grand Slam,
Fabrice Santoro analyzed in detail the moment that Jannik Sinner is living, both from the point of view of the incredible results, and regarding the delicate doping issue, with the CAS hearing scheduled for mid-April.