logo
Jannik Sinner: ‘Players looked at me differently' at Australian Open, considered ‘break' from tennis

Jannik Sinner: ‘Players looked at me differently' at Australian Open, considered ‘break' from tennis

New York Times30-04-2025

Jannik Sinner said he 'didn't feel at ease' during the Australian Open in January and considered taking a break from tennis after he was sanctioned for two anti-doping violations.
Sinner, men's world No 1, twice tested positive for banned anabolic steroid clostebol in March 2024. The Italian, who was found by the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) to bear 'no fault or negligence' for the two violations, accepted a three-month ban in February after reaching a case resolution agreement with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
Advertisement
Sinner opened his 2025 season by winning his second consecutive Australian Open title in January, defeating Alexander Zverev in straight sets in the final. In an interview with Italian broadcaster TG1, Sinner said he 'thought about taking some time off' after the Melbourne major and felt a shift in how he was perceived by his peers.
'I remember the Australian Open this year. I didn't really feel at ease in the locker room, in the player dining area,' said Sinner. 'There were some players that looked at me differently, and I didn't really like it. It's heavy, to live tennis this way — I was always someone who joked around, who went in the locker room talking with this person, that person, anyone — and at that time I was a different person, I didn't feel at ease.
'At that time I said to myself, maybe some time off after Australia, a break for a little bit, would do me good.'
Sinner withdrew from the Rotterdam Open, the ATP 500 event in the Netherlands that takes place just over a week after the Australian Open final. At the time, he said he needed to give his body 'time to rest,' missing an event at which he was defending champion.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) appealed the ITIA's finding in September and sought a period of ineligibility of at least a year, but later deemed a three-month ban an 'appropriate outcome.'
Sinner was free to resume training from April 13, having parted ways with trainer Umberto Ferrara and physiotherapist Giacomo Naldi following the initial decision in his case. He is set to return to competition at the Italian Open in May.
'Sometimes it goes very well, at other times there is a drop and I don't know why,' he said about his level in training. 'I will be very happy to return to the match court, especially in Rome, a very special tournament for me … I miss competition.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alcaraz wins longest French Open final in five sets after saving 3 match points against Sinner
Alcaraz wins longest French Open final in five sets after saving 3 match points against Sinner

Boston Globe

time29 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Alcaraz wins longest French Open final in five sets after saving 3 match points against Sinner

It was also the longest-ever French Open final — 5 hours, 29 minutes — in the Open Era. After 3 hours, 43 minutes, Sinner had his first match point. But with just over five hours since the match began, Alcaraz served for the title at 5-4 up. The drama was still not over. Sinner made a remarkable retrieve from yet another superb Alcaraz drop shot. At the very limit he could stretch to, Sinner glided the ball over the net, with the ball landing with the softness of an autumn leaf and out of Alcaraz's reach to make it 15-40. Advertisement When Sinner won the game to make it 5-5, it was his turn to milk the applause and he was two points away from victory in the 12th game, with Alcaraz on serve and at 15-30 and at deuce. But Alcaraz made a staggering cross-court backhand to make it 6-6 and force a tiebreaker, with the crowd going wild when Alcaraz's cross-court winner made it 4-0. Sinner could not find a way back and Alcaraz won the match with a superb forehand pass down the line and then fell onto his back to celebrate. Advertisement

Jannik Sinner's French Open collapse was a colossal bad beat
Jannik Sinner's French Open collapse was a colossal bad beat

USA Today

time33 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Jannik Sinner's French Open collapse was a colossal bad beat

Jannik Sinner's French Open collapse was a colossal bad beat Janik Sinner had Carlos Alcaraz beat. After two sets of the Roland Garros final, the world No. 1-ranked player was up 2-0. All he had to do was close it. That proved to be more difficult than it sounds, as Alcaraz rallied for a third-set win and +6500 odds at DraftKings after falling behind 5-3 in the fourth set to eventually claim his second straight French Open title in what will go down as one of the best matches ever. An instant classic. At his worst, Alcaraz had an implied win probability of 1.52 percent (a $10 bet on his odds would have won $650). The prediction market site, Polymarket, had Sinner at a live win probability of 99 percent. He blew it. Ahead of the final, Alcaraz opened as a small -115 favorite over Sinner (-110) at BetMGM, and he was a public favorite, drawing 61 percent of bets on a winner and 60 percent of the money. He was also the book's biggest liability from the start of the tournament. So, this was certainly a good result for most bettors. Just don't tell that to people on the other side. They just suffered one of the worst beats imaginable.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store