Sinner defeats Zverev to retain Wimbledon title

Top seed Jannik Sinner of Italy retained his Wimbledon men’s singles title on Sunday by defeating second seed Alexander Zverev of Germany from a set down.

The win represents the fifth Grand Slam title for the 24-year-old Sinner.

What happened on the court?

Zverev took the opening set to a tense tiebreak and worked hard early on, but Sinner responded strongly in the second set tiebreak to equalize.

She then took control with better baseline play in the third and fourth sets and closed out the match in just under four hours.

Jannik Sinner celebrates victory in the men's tennis singles final at Wimbledon 2026 in London, UK on July 12, 2026.
Sinner (right) is the second player to clean sweep all nine Masters 1000 titles in his careerImage: James Marsh/Shutterstock/Imago

Praise for Germany’s Zverev

Sinner continued to praise Zverev, saying, “Of course I’m very happy with the win, but mostly I’m happy with the level at which we both played.”

Pointing to the trophy he said, “If you play like this I’m sure it will be at your house too.”

Sinner has now won 10 consecutive matches against Zverev.

Jannik Sinner collapses on the court after celebrating winning the men's tennis final at Wimbledon 2026 in Wimbledon, London, UK on July 12, 2026.
The Italian lost the first set but came back to win 6-7 (7), 7-6 (2), 6-3, 6-4.Image: Kirsten Holst/Publicity Photo/Imago

Zverev: It didn’t suit me

After losing his fourth Grand Slam final, a disappointed Zverev was forced to think about what could have been.

“I don’t really like you anymore,” Zverev joked to Sinner.

“To be fair, I lost to you nine times in a row,” he said, counting down his consecutive losses to Sinner.

“Congratulations to Jannik, he showed once again why he is the best player in the world. It was great to share Center Court with you on the final weekend. It is a great honor to be here. Unfortunately, it did not go my way.”

Zverev is the first German to contest a Wimbledon title since Boris Becker in 1995.

No German has won the Wimbledon trophy since Michael Stich’s all-German final victory over Becker in 1991

Alexander Zverev of Germany plays in the men's tennis final at Wimbledon 2026 in London, UK on July 12, 2026.
Last month, Zverev won his first Grand Slam title at the 2026 French OpenImage: Frank Molter/dpa/Picture Alliance

Edited by: Jennifer Cimino Gonzalez

Don’t let algorithms hide news. If you trust our team for reliable reporting, please take a moment to select us as your preferred source on Google Click here and press the “Star” or “Favorite” buttonThat’s why you’ll always see our verified news first.

Source link

Leave a Comment