Figure caption,

‘Is that a girl?’ Sinner coach remembers champion as a young child

Sinner dominated the ATP Tour for the first five months of this year, with his 30-match win streak between March and May delivering five consecutive Masters 1000 titles on hard and clay courts.

With that, he joined men’s record 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic as only the second man to complete the Career Golden Masters – completing the full set of nine Masters 1000 events, the tier below the sport’s majors.

Sinner has proven that he is able to assert his style of play, founded on tour-leading serving and returning statistics, and putting opponents under immense pressure with aggressive baseline striking, across all surfaces.

Last year, Sinner defied statistical records by becoming the first player to lead the tour in both service games (92%) and return games won (32.6%) in a single season.

He currently leads both metrics this year too.

On grass, Sinner has won 29 of the 39 tour-level matches he has contested – almost 75% – and has reached at least the quarter-finals on each of his past four visits to Wimbledon.

He was twice stopped by Djokovic, in 2022 and 2023, before losing a five-set thriller to Daniil Medvedev prior to his triumph in 2025.

Sinner has won 10 of his 14 meetings with French Open winner Alexander Zverev, his projected final opponent as the second seed at Wimbledon in Alcaraz’s absence – although the pair have never met on grass.

He dominates the head-to-head against this year’s top six seeds and it is seventh seed Djokovic, a possible semi-final opponent, and eighth seed Medvedev, in Sinner’s quarter, who appear best-placed to cause him problems.

Djokovic trails their head-to-head 6-5 but has won two of their three meetings on grass, while Medvedev has seven wins in 17 meetings with Sinner and won their only previous match on grass at Wimbledon two years ago.

Figure caption,

How many majors could Sinner win?

Mentally, Sinner had to bounce back from a much greater emotional blow before going on to triumph last year at Wimbledon.

There, he banished the demons of his devastating French Open final loss to Alcaraz, in which he led by two sets and held three championship points, but lost the longest Roland Garros final in history.

He would exact his revenge against Alcaraz on Centre Court, losing the first set but ruthlessly dismantling his rival to win his first title at SW19.

But after losing to Alcaraz in the US Open final last September, Sinner admitted he needed to adapt his game to become more versatile and unpredictable.

That dedication to continuous improvement is recognised by his fellow players – and one of the key reasons why he will remain at the top for a long time to come.

“He raised the level so high and he’s always constantly finding solutions to get better. This is something that is not easy to find, especially when you’re at that level,” reported compatriot Matteo Berrettini.

“To change his game – his serve, use drop shots a bit more, change a few things that make him more unpredictable – this shows his level of mindset and I think that’s one of his strengths.”

Figure caption,

Watch: The Making of Jannik Sinner

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