Italian tennis player (born 2001)
Jannik Sinner
[pron 1]
(born 16 August 2001) is an
Italian
professional
tennis
player. He is currently ranked World No. 2 in singles by the
Association of Tennis Professionals
and is the
highest-ranked Italian
tennis player in history.
[3]
Sinner has won 13 singles titles on the
ATP Tour
, including a
Grand Slam
title at the
2024 Australian Open
and two
Masters 1000
titles,
[4]
[5]
and has appeared in the semifinals of three
major tournaments
.
[6]
At the end of the 2023 season, Sinner was runner-up at the
ATP Finals
and led
Italy
to the
Davis Cup
crown, their first since
1976
.
[7]
Sinner also has a career-high ranking of world No. 124 in doubles, achieved in September 2021, and has won one ATP Tour title in doubles.
[8]
Sinner grew up in northern Italy in the predominantly
German-speaking
region of
South Tyrol
. After being a competitive skier between the ages of 8?12, Sinner switched to focus exclusively on tennis at age 13, and moved to
Bordighera
on the
Italian Riviera
to train with veteran coach
Riccardo Piatti
.
[9]
Despite limited success as a junior, Sinner began playing in professional men's events aged 16, and became one of the few players to win multiple
ATP Challenger Tour
titles at age 17. In 2019, he broke into the top 100, winning the
Next Generation ATP Finals
and the
ATP Newcomer of the Year
award. In 2021, he became the youngest
ATP 500
champion at the
2021 Citi Open
, and became the first player born in the 2000s to enter the top 10 in rankings. Sinner won his first Masters 1000 title at the
2023 Canadian Open
and finished the season by reaching the final of the
ATP Finals
and contributed to Italy lifting the
Davis Cup
. At the
2024 Australian Open
, Sinner defeated world No. 1
Novak Djokovic
in the semifinals to reach his first major final.
[10]
He then defeated
Daniil Medvedev
in
a five-set final
, coming back from two sets down to win his first Grand Slam title.
[11]
Early life and background
Jannik Sinner was born 16 August 2001 to Hanspeter and Siglinde Sinner in
Innichen
in the province of
South Tyrol
in
Northern Italy
. His mother tongue is German.
[12]
He grew up in the town of
Sexten
in the
Dolomites
, the family hometown, where his father and mother work as a chef and a waitress at a
ski lodge
, respectively.
[13]
He has a brother named Marc.
[14]
Sinner began both skiing and playing tennis at age three. He was one of Italy's top junior skiers from eight to twelve years old, winning a national championship in
giant slalom
at age eight and earning a national runner-up at the age of twelve.
[15]
[16]
[17]
While training in skiing Sinner gave up tennis for a year at the age of seven before his father pushed him to return to the sport.
[18]
When he resumed playing, he began working with Heribert Mayr as his first regular coach.
[19]
Nonetheless, tennis was still only his third priority behind skiing and
football
.
[20]
[21]
At the age of 13 Sinner decided to give up skiing and football in favour of tennis. He preferred it over skiing because he wanted to compete directly against an opponent and to have more margin of error over the course of an entire match. He also wanted to be in an individual sport where he could make all of the decisions, an opportunity he would not have in a team sport like football.
[21]
He decided to move on his own to
Bordighera
in
Liguria
on the
Italian Riviera
to train at the Piatti Tennis Centre under
Riccardo Piatti
and Massimo Sartori, a decision which his parents supported.
[14]
[16]
[18]
At the centre, Sinner lived with the family of Luka Cvjetkovi?, one of his coaches.
[22]
Before Sinner began training in tennis full-time with Piatti, he had been playing only twice a week.
[20]
Junior career
Sinner began playing on the
ITF Junior Circuit
, the premier junior tour which is run by the
International Tennis Federation
(ITF), in 2016. Despite having limited success as a junior, he moved mainly to the professional tour following the end of 2017. He never played the main draw of any high-level Grade 1 events in
singles
, and the only higher-level Grade A tournament he entered was the
Trofeo Bonfiglio
. He followed up an opening round loss at Italy's Grade A tournament in 2017 with a quarterfinal in 2018. That was the only junior event he played in 2018. He never played any of the junior Grand Slam tournaments. Because he entered so few high-level tournaments, Sinner's career-high junior ranking was a relatively low No. 133.
[23]
Professional career
2018: ITF Futures and Challenger Tour
Sinner began playing on the
ITF Men's Circuit
in early 2018. With his low ranking he could initially be directly accepted into only ITF Futures events. Nonetheless, he began receiving
wild cards
for
ATP Challenger Tour
events, the second-tier tour run by the
Association of Tennis Professionals
(ATP), in the second half of the year.
[24]
His only ITF title of the year was in
doubles
,
[25]
and he finished the season ranked No. 551.
[26]
2019: NextGen Finals title and top 100
Sinner won his first ATP Challenger title in
Bergamo
in February 2019 at the age of 17 years and 6 months, despite entering the tournament with no match wins at the Challenger level. He became the first person born in 2001 to reach a Challenger final, and the youngest Italian to win a Challenger title in history. With the title, he rose over 200 spots in ATP rankings up to No. 324.
[27]
[28]
After his first two ITF Futures titles, Sinner entered his first ATP tournament at the
Hungarian Open
as a
lucky loser
, where he notched his first tour-level win over home wild card
Mate Valkusz
.
[29]
The next week, he reached his second ATP Challenger final in
Ostrava
, finishing runner-up to
Kamil Majchrzak
.
[30]
During the second half of the season Sinner played more often on the ATP Tour than the Challenger Tour.
[31]
His first
ATP Masters
victory came at the
Italian Open
against
Steve Johnson
, and he broke into the top 200 with his next ATP win at the
Croatia Open Umag
in July.
[26]
The next month, he won a second ATP Challenger title in
Lexington
to become one of just eleven 17-year-olds to have won multiple Challenger titles.
[32]
After losing in qualifying at
Wimbledon
, Sinner qualified for his first Grand Slam main draw at the
US Open
.
[33]
He lost his debut match to No. 24
Stan Wawrinka
.
[31]
Sinner had a strong finish to the season. As a wild card at the
European Open
, he became the youngest player in five years to reach an ATP semifinal.
[34]
Along the way, he knocked off top seed and world No. 13
Gael Monfils
for his first career top 50 victory.
[35]
This performance helped him break into the top 100 for the first time one week later.
[26]
At the end of the season, Sinner qualified for the
2019 Next Gen ATP Finals
as the Italian wild card and the lowest seed.
[36]
He won in his round robin group with victories over
Frances Tiafoe
and
Mikael Ymer
, losing only to
Ugo Humbert
. After defeating
Miomir Kecmanovi?
in the semifinals, Sinner upset top seed and world No. 18
Alex de Minaur
in straight sets to win the title.
[37]
He played one last event in Italy the following week, winning a third Challenger title in
Ortisei
. Sinner finished the year at world No. 78, becoming the youngest player in the year-end top 80 since
Rafael Nadal
in 2003.
[29]
He was also named
ATP Newcomer of the Year
.
[38]
2020: First ATP title and top 40
Early in the year Sinner made the second round of the
2020 Australian Open
, recording his first Grand Slam main draw match win over home wild card
Max Purcell
before losing to
Marton Fucsovics
. As a wild card at the
Rotterdam Open
, he earned his first top 10 victory against world No. 10
David Goffin
.
[39]
Following the ATP Tour shutdown due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
, Sinner had a successful restart to the season. Although he lost his opening round match to
Karen Khachanov
at the
US Open
, he fared better in Europe. He reached the third round at the
Rome Masters
, highlighted by a victory over world No. 6
Stefanos Tsitsipas
.
[40]
He then progressed to become the youngest quarterfinalist at the
French Open
since
Novak Djokovic
in 2006, and the first to make the quarterfinals on debut since Rafael Nadal in 2005. During the tournament, he defeated Goffin again as well as US Open runner-up and world No. 7
Alexander Zverev
before losing to Nadal.
[41]
[42]
After a semifinal at the
Cologne Championship
where he lost to Zverev,
[43]
Sinner closed out the season by winning the
Sofia Open
for his first ATP title. During the event, he defeated Next Gen rival Alex de Minaur and then
Vasek Pospisil
in the final.
[44]
He became the youngest Italian tour-level champion in the
Open Era
and the youngest player overall to win an ATP title since
Kei Nishikori
in
2008
.
[45]
[46]
Sinner finished the year ranked world No. 37.
[26]
2021: Four titles, Masters 1000 final, top 10 debut
Sinner carried over his success from late 2020 into the start of the 2021 season. He won his second career ATP title at the
Great Ocean Road Open
,
[47]
and notably defeated No. 20 Karen Khachanov in the semifinals after saving a match point.
[48]
He became the youngest to win back-to-back ATP titles since
Rafael Nadal
in 2005.
[47]
His ten-match winning streak came to an end in the first round of the
2021 Australian Open
, where he lost a tight five-set match to world No. 12
Denis Shapovalov
.
[49]
Sinner's next big result was at the
Miami Open
, where he reached his first
ATP Masters 1000
final. During the tournament, he defeated Khachanov again and later world No. 12
Roberto Bautista Agut
in the semifinal.
[50]
[51]
He finished runner-up to
Hubert Hurkacz
.
[52]
Then at the
French Open
, his campaign was stopped short for the second year running by Rafael Nadal who this time defeated Sinner in straight sets in the fourth round.
[53]
In his main draw debut at
Wimbledon
, he lost in the first round to
Marton Fucsovics
.
Partnering
Reilly Opelka
he won his first doubles title at the
2021 Atlanta Open
, defeating
Steve Johnson
and
Jordan Thompson
.
[54]
At the same tournament in singles he fell in the second round to
Christopher O'Connell
.
[55]
At the
2021 Citi Open
in Washington, D.C., Sinner went into the tournament as the fifth seed and made it to the finals and beat several young players along the way such as
Emil Ruusuvuori
,
Sebastian Korda
, and
Jenson Brooksby
.
[56]
He beat
Mackenzie McDonald
in the final to win his third title and first
ATP 500
title. Sinner was the first Italian finalist and champion in Washington's tournament history as well as the youngest ATP 500 and first teen champion since the category was created in 2009.
[57]
As a result, he entered the top 15 in the ATP rankings on 9 August 2021.
At the
US Open
, he defeated
Gael Monfils
in the third round to reach the second week of a Major for the second time in the season. Sinner's tournament ended when he lost to
Alexander Zverev
in the 4th round in straight sets.
Sinner successfully defended his title at the
Sofia Open
as the top seed, defeating again second seed Gael Monfils in the final.
[58]
Sinner made his sixth career final at the
2021 European Open
without dropping a set en route. He defeated
Lorenzo Musetti
,
Arthur Rinderknech
and
Lloyd Harris
to reach the final.
[59]
He bested
Diego Schwartzman
in the final to take his fifth career title. He became the youngest man to win five ATP titles since 19-year-old Novak Djokovic.
[60]
On 1 November, Sinner became the first male player born in the 2000s to break into the top-10 after a semifinal appearance at the
Vienna Open
.
At the
Rolex Paris Masters
, Sinner received a bye in the first round but was defeated by
Carlos Alcaraz
. Because of this, Sinner was unable to directly qualify for the season-ending
Nitto ATP Finals
.
[61]
At the
ATP Finals
in Turin, Sinner was present as the first alternate. Sinner entered the tournament after countryman
Matteo Berrettini
was forced to withdraw with an abdominal injury after his first match with Alexander Zverev.
[62]
He defeated
Hubert Hurkacz
and became the youngest player to win an ATP Finals match on debut since
Lleyton Hewitt
in Lisbon in 2000 and the first alternate to win a match since
Janko Tipsarevi?
in London in 2011.
[63]
[64]
Sinner played
Daniil Medvedev
next in the round robin stage, holding a match point before being defeated in 3 sets. As a result, he re-entered the top-10 in the rankings and finished the year at world No. 10 on 22 November 2021.
In the
Davis Cup Finals
, Sinner defeated
John Isner
becoming only the second player (after
Thiemo de Bakker
) ever to bagel Isner.
[65]
2022: Three major quarterfinals, first clay court title
At the
Australian Open
Sinner reached the quarterfinals of a major for the second time in his career, becoming the fifth Italian man to reach that stage in Melbourne.
[66]
He then lost to fourth seed
Stefanos Tsitsipas
in straight sets.
At the
Miami Open
, he saved three match points in the opening round against
Emil Ruusuvuori
and five match points against
Pablo Carreno Busta
to advance to the round of 16.
[67]
He then defeated
Nick Kyrgios
but retired against
Francisco Cerundolo
in the quarterfinals. In the
Monte Carlo Masters
, he again reached the quarterfinals after defeating fifth seed
Andrey Rublev
, before losing to second seed
Alexander Zverev
in a three-set and over three hour-long match.
[68]
[69]
He again saved three match points in the opener at the
Madrid Open
against
Tommy Paul
to move to the second round.
[70]
Next, he defeated
Alex de Minaur
for his 100th career win;
[71]
he hit this milestone after 147 matches (100?47) on Tour, which was a faster rate than everyone in the Top 10 besides
Rafael Nadal
(100?37) and
Novak Djokovic
(100?43).
[72]
He was defeated in the third round by
Felix Auger-Aliassime
.
[73]
At the
French Open
, he retired in the fourth round against Andrey Rublev after sustaining a knee injury.
[74]
At the
Eastbourne International
, Sinner suffered his first opening round loss of the year after losing to Tommy Paul in three sets.
[75]
At the
2022 Wimbledon Championships
, he recorded his first win at this Major over
Stan Wawrinka
.
[76]
He then beat
Mikael Ymer
,
John Isner
, and
Carlos Alcaraz
to reach his third career Grand Slam quarterfinal. He lost to top seed and eventual champion Novak Djokovic in five sets in the quarterfinals, after being two sets to love up.
[77]
At the
Croatia Open
, Sinner defeated Carlos Alcaraz in the final to win his first clay court title.
[78]
In
Montreal
, he lost to eventual champion
Pablo Carreno Busta
in the third round.
[79]
Sinner's loss guaranteed a maiden
Masters 1000
finalist from his half of the draw. At the
Cincinnati Masters
, he lost in the third round to Felix Auger-Aliassime after being up a set, a break, and 2 match points.
[80]
Seeded 11th at the
US Open
, he reached the fourth round after defeating
Brandon Nakashima
in four sets.
[81]
Next, he defeated
Ilya Ivashka
in a five set match lasting close to four hours to reach the quarterfinals for the first time at this Major.
[82]
He became the youngest player to reach the quarterfinals of all four Grand Slam tournaments since Novak Djokovic in 2007?08.
[83]
He lost to Carlos Alcaraz in a five-set match that lasted 5 hours and 15 minutes; the match set the record as the latest finish (at 2:50 am EST) and second longest match in US Open history. Sinner held a match point while serving up 5?4 in the 4th set, but ended up losing the set 5?7.
[84]
[85]
In September, during the
Davis Cup Finals
after
Matteo Berrettini
won his singles match against Argentina, Sinner won the second match (best of three matches) and thus secured a place for Italy's Davis Cup team at the Final 8 of the Davis Cup Finals.
[86]
Following close to a month break due to an injury sustained in the semifinal at the
2022 Sofia Open
[87]
he returned to the
2022 Erste Bank Open
in Vienna and reached also the quarterfinals losing to top seed and eventual champion
Daniil Medvedev
.
[88]
In his next tournament, the
2022 Rolex Paris Masters
, he lost in the first round to qualifier
Marc-Andrea Huesler
.
[89]
Sinner finished the year ranked 15th in the world, one space ahead of countryman Matteo Berrettini.
2023: Masters 1000 title, Davis Cup champion, world No. 4
Sinner started his season at the
2023 Adelaide international 1
, where he lost in the quarterfinals to eventual runner-up
Sebastian Korda
.
[90]
At the
2023 Australian Open
, Sinner lost in the 4th round to eventual runner-up
Stefanos Tsitsipas
in 5 sets.
[91]
Sinner then won his seventh title at the
Open Sud de France
in Montpellier, becoming the first player to win a tour-level title in the season without having dropped a single set and the first since countryman
Lorenzo Musetti
won the title in Naples in October 2022.
[92]
At the
ABN AMRO Open
he defeated top seed and world No. 3 Stefanos Tsitsipas taking his revenge for the Australian Open loss, for his biggest win ever.
[93]
Next in the quarterfinals, he defeated
Stan Wawrinka
in straight sets.
[94]
In the semifinals, he defeated home favorite
Tallon Griekspoor
to reach the final,
[95]
which he lost to sixth seed
Daniil Medvedev
.
In March, he played in
Indian Wells
where he defeated
Richard Gasquet
,
Adrian Mannarino
, and
Stan Wawrinka
all in straight sets to advance to the quarterfinals where he faced defending champion
Taylor Fritz
and won in a three-set match. In the following round in the semifinals, he lost in straight sets to career rival and top seed
Carlos Alcaraz
who returned to world No. 1 following the tournament.
[96]
In
Miami
, he reached the quarterfinals of this tournament for a third straight year after defeating
Grigor Dimitrov
and
Andrey Rublev
, thus returning to the top 10 in the rankings at world No. 9.
[97]
He then defeated
Emil Ruusuvuori
to reach back-to-back semifinals,
[98]
where he again faced the defending champion Carlos Alcaraz, this time winning to reach his second Miami and career Masters final in three years,
[99]
putting an end to Alcaraz's hopes for a Sunshine Double and preventing him from returning to the No. 1 spot.
[100]
He lost to fourth seed Daniil Medvedev in straight sets in the final, extending his losing streak versus the Russian to 0?6.
[101]
In
Monte Carlo
he reached a third consecutive Masters semifinal defeating compatriot and 16th seed
Lorenzo Musetti
.
[102]
At the
French Open
, Sinner was upset in the second round by
Daniel Altmaier
in a five-set match despite serving for the match in the fourth set and having two match points.
[103]
At five hours and 26 minutes, it was the longest match of Sinner's career up until this point and the fifth-longest in the tournament history
[104]
as well as the second longest of the season after
Andy Murray
against
Thanasi Kokkinakis
at the Australian Open.
[105]
He reached back to back quarterfinals in
Wimbledon
after defeating
Juan Manuel Cerundolo
,
Diego Schwartzman
,
Quentin Halys
and
Daniel Elahi Galan
.
[106]
He then reached his first Major semifinal after defeating
Roman Safiullin
, before losing to
Novak Djokovic
in straight sets.
[107]
In August, he won his maiden Masters 1000 title at the
Canadian Open
, defeating compatriot
Matteo Berrettini
, Andy Murray by walkover,
Gael Monfils
, and
Tommy Paul
en route to the final, where he beat
Alex de Minaur
in straight sets for his eighth ATP title.
[108]
At the
China Open
, he defeated world No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz, his fourth tour-level win against the Spaniard, to reach his fifth final of the season, where he defeated world No. 3 Daniil Medvedev for the first time at the seventh time of asking.
[109]
As a result, he climbed to a career-high World No. 4 to become the second Italian in the history of the ATP rankings to reach the Top 5, equaling
Adriano Panatta
.
[110]
At the
Shanghai Masters
he lost in the round of 16 to
Ben Shelton
.
[111]
He recorded his 55th win over Andrey Rublev to reach his fourth ATP 500 career final in
Vienna
and became the first Italian man with the most wins for a season in the Open Era, surpassing
Corrado Barazzutti
's 54 mark in 1978.
[112]
He won the final defeating again top seed Daniil Medvedev to win his tenth ATP title, defeating him in two consecutive finals.
[113]
On his debut at the
ATP Finals
, Sinner won all of his round-robin matches, notably beating the world No. 1 Novak Djokovic in a third set tiebreaker to clinch his fifth top-5 win in a row.
[114]
[115]
He ultimately lost in a rematch against Djokovic in the final.
[116]
He then made his debut in the
Davis Cup
, where he defeated Tallon Griekspoor in singles to help Italy win its quarterfinal tie against the Netherlands.
[117]
In the semifinal, Sinner faced Djokovic for the third time in 11 days, and become the first player to defeat him in a Davis Cup singles match since
Juan Martin del Potro
in 2011.
[118]
He saved three consecutive match points in the third set to become only the fourth player to beat Djokovic from match points down and the first one to do so with three in a row.
[119]
[120]
He also became only the third player ever to defeat Djokovic twice in 12 days, alongside Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray.
[121]
Sinner then teamed up with
Lorenzo Sonego
for the decisive doubles match, defeating Djokovic and
Miomir Kecmanovic
to clinch the tie and help Italy reach the Davis Cup final for the first time since 1998.
[122]
In the final, he defeated Australian Alex de Minaur to clinch the title for Italy for the second time after 47 years since 1976.
[7]
2024: First major title, 200th career win, world No. 1
Sinner started his year at the
Australian Open
, where he beat
Botic van de Zandschulp
,
Jesper de Jong
,
Sebastian Baez
,
Karen Khachanov
and
Andrey Rublev
(all in straight sets) to reach his second semifinal and first at the Australian Open. In the semifinals, he upset world no. 1 and defending champion
Novak Djokovic
to advance to his first major final, becoming the first player not to face a break point against Djokovic in a completed major match.
[123]
His victory over the world No. 1 was Djokovic's first defeat at the Australian Open since
2018
.
[8]
He became the first Italian player to reach the singles final at this major and the third man, after
Adriano Panatta
at the
1976 French Open
and
Matteo Berrettini
at the
2021 Wimbledon Championships
, to reach a major final in the Open Era.
[124]
[125]
In
the final
, he came from a two-set deficit to beat
Daniil Medvedev
to become the first Italian player, male or female, to win the Australian Open singles title, and the third man to win a Major (the second of which in the Open Era), and the first in 48 years.
[11]
[126]
His victory over Medvedev meant he became the second player to win the Australian Open after losing the first two sets in the final, after
Rafael Nadal
, who also beat Medvedev in
2022
.
As the top seed at the
Rotterdam Open
, he recorded his 200th win in the quarterfinals, after
Milos Raonic
retired with a hip injury with Sinner leading by a set, becoming the first player born in the 2000s to accomplish this feat.
[127]
[128]
[129]
After defeating
Tallon Griekspoor
in the semifinal and
Alex de Minaur
in the final, Sinner rose to a new career high of No. 3 in the world, becoming the highest-ranked Italian player in history.
[130]
Sinner also became the first male player since
Lleyton Hewitt
, in
2001
, to win his debut event as Grand Slam champion.
[131]
At the
2024 BNP Paribas Open
, with a victory over 25th seed
Jan-Lennard Struff
to reach the fourth round, he recorded his 17th consecutive match win, the longest ATP level streak for an Italian player in the Open Era.
[132]
Sinner extended this to 19 consecutive wins (16-0 in 2024) by defeating
Ji?i Lehe?ka
in the quarterfinal.
[133]
Prior to his semifinal defeat to
Carlos Alcaraz
, Sinner had won 36 of his past 38 matches, dating back to the
2023 China Open
.
In March, Sinner played in
Indian Wells singles
where he defeated
Thanasi Kokkinakis
,
Jan-Lennard Struff
,
Ben Shelton
, and
Ji?i Lehe?ka
all in straight sets to advance to the semi finals. In the semi finals, he faced
Carlos Alcaraz
and lost in a three-set match. He also played in
Indian Wells doubles
with
Lorenzo Sonego
where they defeated
Karen Khachanov
and
Andrey Rublev
in the first round in straight sets. In the second round, they lost to
Marcel Granollers
and
Horacio Zeballos
in straight sets.
At the
2024 Miami Open
, Sinner defeated
Grigor Dimitrov
in the final to win his second Master’s 1000 title; as a result, he climbed to a career high (and Italian record) ranking of No. 2 in the world.
[134]
Sinner improved his 2024 ATP match record to 22?1.
[135]
Sinner's clay season saw his second defeat of the season, to
Stefanos Tsitsipas
at the
Monte-Carlo Masters
, in April. In May, Sinner withdrew from the
Madrid Masters
, at the quarterfinal stage, due to a hip injury.
[136]
Three days later, Sinner withdrew from the
Italian Open
due to the same injury.
[137]
Following Novak Djokovic's withdrawal from the
2024 French Open
on 4 June, Sinner is confirmed to become
World No.1
on Monday 10 June 2024, following the conclusion of the tournament.
[138]
[139]
[140]
He will become the first Italian player (male or female) to hold the top position in the rankings.
Rivalries
Jannik Sinner and
Carlos Alcaraz
have faced each other 9 times since 2021; Sinner trails Alcaraz 4-5.
[141]
Their matches include the
2022 US Open
quarterfinal, which Alcaraz won
saving match points
(going on to win the title), and the
2023 Miami
semifinal, which was won by Sinner.
Playing style
Sinner is an
aggressive baseliner
and is one of the hardest hitters on the ATP tour. Sinner's
groundstroke
strength is his two-handed-backhand, which he hits with more topspin than any other player on the tour, registering an average of 1858 revolutions per minute on the shot along with the fifth-best average speed of 111.2 km/h (69.1 mph).
[142]
His forehand is also a strength, owing to the fact he has a short compact takeback, meaning he rarely has to rush the shot, and the ability to rapidly open up his body, generating huge racket head speed and allowing him to hit the shot at over 160 km/h (100 mph) on occasion. He uses a modern, semi-western
grip
to generate large amounts of topspin, increasing net clearance and reducing the likelihood of unforced errors.
He also possesses a powerful first serve, which can reach up to speeds of 221 km/h (137.3 mph). His coaching team has tried to combat this by alternating between the pinpoint (legs together) and platform (legs apart) stances; as of late 2023, they have settled on the pinpoint stance. Sinner is aiming to incorporate more variety into his game, hence he has been developing his net game and ability to
serve-and-volley
, as well as his slices and dropshots, to reduce the number of long rallies he has to play from the baseline.
Sinner has been compared to
Roger Federer
for his calm on-court demeanour and all-court movement.
[15]
[18]
[22]
Federer himself has praised Sinner for the balance in his game, remarking, "What I like about him is that he almost has the same speed of shooting from the forehand and backhand".
[17]
Former world No. 1 junior and tennis coach
Claudio Pistolesi
has praised Sinner's good lateral movement, which he attributes in part to Sinner's background in skiing.
[143]
In this regard, Sinner has been compared to
Novak Djokovic
, who also credits a background in skiing for improving his tennis skills.
[144]
Coaches
When Sinner began to prioritise tennis at age thirteen, he was coached by
Riccardo Piatti
, who had also been a part-time coach of
Novak Djokovic
and
Milos Raonic
.
[22]
At the time, he also began working with Andrea Volpini and Massimo Sartori, the latter of whom was a longtime coach of
Andreas Seppi
.
[145]
He continued to work with Piatti as his primary coach, and Volpini as his second coach. His team also consisted of
physiotherapist
Claudio Zimaglia and fitness coach Dalibor Sirola.
[21]
In February 2022, he decided to stop his long collaboration with Piatti and his team and began to train with
Simone Vagnozzi
, ex-coach of
Marco Cecchinato
.
[146]
In July 2022, coach
Darren Cahill
officially joined Sinner's team.
[147]
Personal life
Sinner grew up in a German-speaking family.
[148]
His Italian greatly improved after moving to Bordighera at the age of 13,
[149]
[150]
and he also speaks English.
[151]
Sinner resides in
Monte Carlo
in
Monaco
.
[14]
He is a fan of the football club
AC Milan
.
[20]
One of his tennis idols is compatriot
Andreas Seppi
, who is also from
South Tyrol
. Aged 17, Sinner stated that one of his goals was to "do better than him [Seppi]". He also idolized
Roger Federer
and
Novak Djokovic
.
[28]
Sinner follows a healthy diet and conservative lifestyle. He enjoys cars.
[152]
[153]
He is currently dating fellow tennis player
Anna Kalinskaya
.
[154]
Endorsements
Though sponsorship deals can change from month to month, some of Jannik Sinner's endorsements as of 2024 include:
Nike
,
[155]
Head
,
[156]
Rolex
,
[157]
Gucci
,
[158]
Intesa San Paolo,
[159]
FASTWEB
,
[160]
Pigna,
[161]
Lavazza
,
[162]
Panini Comics
,
[163]
and Formula 1.
[164]
Other 2024 press releases have Sinner sponsors listed such as
Alfa Romeo
,
[165]
[166]
Technogym
,
[167]
and
Parmigiano Reggiano
.
[168]
[169]
Career statistics
Grand Slam singles performance timeline
Key
W
|
F
|
SF
|
QF
|
#R
|
RR
|
Q#
|
DNQ
|
A
|
NH
|
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W?L) win?loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.
Current through the
2024 French Open
.
Source: ATP profile
[14]
Grand Slam tournaments
Singles: 1 (1 title)
Year-end championships finals
Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)
Records
Open Era records
- This record was attained in the
Open Era
of tennis.
- Records in
bold
indicate peer-less achievements.
See also
References
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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"
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(
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External links
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Entourage
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Career
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Notable matches
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Grand Slam titles
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ATP Masters titles
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ATP Tour titles
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National representation
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Articles and topics related to Jannik Sinner
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World Top 10 tennis players as of 20 May 2024
[update]
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