logo
Tennis-Sinner's dad too busy with work to attend record-breaking French Open final

Tennis-Sinner's dad too busy with work to attend record-breaking French Open final

The Star4 hours ago

Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - June 8, 2025 Italy's Jannik Sinner looks dejected after losing the men's singles final against Spain's Carlos Alcaraz REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
PARIS (Reuters) -World number one Jannik Sinner was part of the longest French Open final when he lost in five sets to defending champion Carlos Alcaraz on Sunday but his dad was not there to witness it because he was at work, the Italian said.
The marathon match lasted five hours and 29 minutes, making it the longest French Open final since tennis turned professional in 1968 and the second longest in Grand Slam history.
"My dad was not here because he was working today," Sinner, who hails from a German-speaking Alpine region in northern Italy told a press conference. "Nothing of our success changes in the family."
His father works as a chef in the mountains.
Sinner had a full box for support, with his team of coaches as well as his mother, who was seen welling up and being extremely nervous as her son wasted three match points in the fourth set.
"It was nice to see my mom here. And yeah, I guess my dad, he was watching on TV - if he finished work. It's okay."
The Italian top seed wasted three match points at 5-3, 40-0 up in the fourth set and was also 6-5 up in the decider, before Alcaraz clawed his way back in dramatic fashion to win the title for the second year running.
"So we are just very simple family, you know," he said.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Flavio's flavour
Flavio's flavour

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Flavio's flavour

BEFORE his return to Formula One in June of last year as an executive adviser to Alpine, Flavio Briatore made a vow to Luca de Meo, the chief executive of the Renault Group. 'I promised Luca that in two, three years, the team would be on the podium, or very close to the podium,' Briatore said in an interview in May. 'That was only nine months ago.' To de Meo and Renault, Alpine is the family jewel, and Briatore, 75, is charged with restoring the team's lustre. 'I'd been in contact with Luca,' Briatore said about his initial return to the team. 'One day we were talking, and he was desperate because the team were last in the table,' referring to the constructors' championship. 'I said to him that under the right conditions, then maybe I'd come back to help, just as a consultant, for six or seven Grands Prix, nothing like the role is now,' he added. 'It was something completely different to what it is now.' After 14 years out of Formula One, Briatore, who had vowed to never return, indeed came back. He had been banned from the sport when he was the team principal of Renault because of the 'Crashgate' scandal, in which the Renault driver Nelson Piquet Jr. deliberately crashed at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix to bring out a safety car that would help his teammate, Fernando Alonso, win the race. The ban was eventually overturned by a French court. Briatore taking a selfie with former MotoGP rider and compatriot Valentino Rossi at the Enzo and Dino Ferrari racetrack in Imola, Italy, on May 18. — AP 'I had possibilities to come back immediately, but they weren't right,' Briatore said. 'I wanted to stop anyway, maybe not in that way, but it was time to finish. I'd won seven championships, and Formula One is very demanding.' As team principal of Benetton, Briatore guided Michael Schumacher to the first two of his seven drivers' titles in 1994 and 1995. The team won the constructors' championship in 1995. In 2005 and 2006, with Renault, Briatore led Alonso and the team to the drivers' and constructors' championships. After leaving Formula One, Briatore, an Italian entrepreneur, focused on his businesses in the food and beverage industry. He said he had had 'one or two proposals' to return, but 'nothing very exciting' until his conversations with de Meo. Briatore is back with the team for the third time. 'In a few months, we have done a lot for the organisation,' he said. 'We've changed the commercial side, the marketing side, and we've brought in two or three very important sponsors. 'We've changed a lot of people on the technical side. I would say the team is now 85% complete. We're still missing key people to make us stronger next year, but I know who they are.' Briatore said that the mood inside the team had changed since his arrival as adviser and that the people were more motivated. Alpine's Pierre Gasly in action as spectators on yachts look on during practice for the Monaco Grand Prix. — Reuters After six Grands Prix, Alpine have scored points once, a seventh place from Pierre Gasly in Bahrain, and are currently bottom in the 10-team constructors' championship. Gasly said Briatore had 'brought a lot of good to the team.' 'Formula One is not a sport where things change over two, three months,' he said. 'We need time, but he is clearly pushing everybody in the right direction, in a very impressive way, trying to get the maximum out of every department, and trying hard to put the team in a better place.' Jack Doohan, who was replace by Franco Colapinto with the team deciding to 'rotate' the race seat alongside Gasly, said Briatore was 'an icon' and 'someone I've looked up to for a very, very long time.' 'I love his brutal, to-the-point nature,' he said, adding there's 'no mucking around.' 'You find out what's going on very, very quickly. ' Briatore agreed. 'You need to tell the truth,' he said. 'I don't have time to massage people's egos, so I'm very straight with everybody. 'No politics. Not in my team. This is most important.' Gasly, who finished eighth at last week's Spanish Grand Prix, is the only driver to score points for Alpine. — AP Doohan will remain with Alpine as a test and reserve driver through the evaluation period ahead of 2026, when the team change their engine supplier. That means Renault will not be involved in Formula One for the first time since 1988. Alpine will use Mercedes power units in 2026. 'It was a very hard decision,' Briatore said. 'But if you want to compete at the highest level, whatever your business, you need to be at the same pace as everybody else.' In the team's various guises over the years, as Renault, Lotus and Alpine, they have not been champions since 2006. In 96 Grands Prix since the team rebranded as Alpine in 2021, they have won one race and scored five additional podium finishes. Briatore said that with the changes being made, it would be champion again: 'Why not? Sure. If you see the teams in front of us, they're nothing special. It's only people, more committed, less distracted.' — NYT

Soccer-Portugal's emotional Ronaldo rejoices in winning Nations League
Soccer-Portugal's emotional Ronaldo rejoices in winning Nations League

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Soccer-Portugal's emotional Ronaldo rejoices in winning Nations League

Soccer Football - Nations League - Final - Portugal v Spain - Allianz Arena, Munich, Germany - June 8, 2025 Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, Francisco Conceicao and Joao Felix celebrate in front of the fans after winning the UEFA Nations League REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth MUNICH, Germany (Reuters) -Portugal skipper Cristiano Ronaldo shed tears of joy as they won their second Nations League title on Sunday, insisting that winning trophies with his country beats all club honours. Ronaldo's 138th international goal in the second half took the final to penalties after a 2-2 draw with Spain, with the substituted 40-year-old forward looking on from the sidelines as Portugal netted all five spot kicks to claim the title. The triumph, which left the five-times Champions League winner in tears, was Ronaldo's third on the international stage, accompanying his 2016 European Championship and 2019 Nations League winners' medals. "What a joy," Ronaldo told Sport TV. "First of all for this generation, which deserved a title of this magnitude, for our families. My children came here, my wife, my brother, my friends. "Winning for Portugal is always special. I have many titles with clubs, but nothing is better than winning for Portugal. It's tears. It's duty done and a lot of joy. "When you talk about Portugal it is always a special feeling. Being captain of this generation is a source of pride. Winning a title is always the pinnacle in a national team." Ronaldo's future remains uncertain. He said last week he did not plan to play at the Club World Cup in the United States, which starts later this month, despite being courted by clubs taking part in the 32-team tournament. The Al-Nassr forward said he had several offers from other teams to play in the U.S., while his side's sporting director, Fernando Hierro said last month they were negotiating with Ronaldo over a contract extension but faced competition from clubs eager to sign the five-times Ballon d'Or winner. For now, however, he is only focused on celebrating his latest triumph, having played in the final with an injury. "It's beautiful," he added. "It's for our nation. We are a small people, but with a very big ambition. "The future is short term. Now is the time to rest well. I had the injury and that was the maximum, the maximum ... I pushed, because for the national team you have to push." (Reporting by Peter Hall)

Alcaraz stuns Sinner in all-time great French Open final
Alcaraz stuns Sinner in all-time great French Open final

New Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Alcaraz stuns Sinner in all-time great French Open final

PARIS: Carlos Alcaraz saved three championship points as he produced an astonishing fightback from two sets down to beat Jannik Sinner in a French Open final for the ages on Sunday. Reigning champion Alcaraz rallied from the brink of defeat to overcome world number one Sinner 4-6, 6-7 (4/7), 6-4, 7-6 (7/3), 7-6 (10/2) after five hours and 29 minutes to clinch his fifth Grand Slam title. The 22-year-old Spaniard is now unbeaten in five Grand Slam finals after snapping Sinner's 20-match winning run at the majors. "This was the most exciting match that I've played so far without a doubt," said Alcaraz. "I think the match had everything." Alcaraz pulled off his first ever comeback from two sets down in the longest Roland Garros final in history, recovering from 5-3 down in the fourth set when Sinner had three match points. "Today was all about believing in myself. Never doubted myself today and I tried to go for it," he said. "Real champions are made in those situations." Alcaraz is the first man to win a Grand Slam title after saving match point since Novak Djokovic beat Roger Federer in the 2019 Wimbledon final. The only other man to do it in the Open era was Gaston Gaudio at Roland Garros in 2004. Sinner fell agonisingly short of a third successive Grand Slam crown after last year's US Open title and back-to-back Australian Open triumphs. "It's easier to play than talking now," said a devastated Sinner. "I won't sleep very well tonight but it's OK. "We try to delete it somehow and take the positive and keep going. There are no other ways," he added. "It hurts, but you cannot keep crying." Sinner suffered his fifth straight loss to Alcaraz in what was their first meeting in a Grand Slam final – and the first championship match at a major between two men born in the 2000s. Alcaraz leads 8-4 overall having also beaten Sinner in the final in Rome, where the Italian returned to competition in May after a three-month doping ban. Alcaraz put the pressure on Sinner by carving out three break points to start Saturday's final, but the Italian resisted and soon had a chance of his own. He couldn't take advantage and found himself having to fend off two more break points at 1-1, producing clutch serves to grind out another tough hold. Alcaraz's persistence paid off in the fifth game when he broke to nudge 3-2 ahead, only for the Spaniard to immediately hand the lead back. The unshakeable Sinner threatened to break again at 4-3, with a brief lapse from Alcaraz eventually enabling Sinner to snatch the first set. Sinner hit the accelerator to start the second set, surging 3-0 in front. After facing seven break points in the opener, he tightened up considerably on serve. But Alcaraz brought up his first break point of the second set with Sinner serving for a two-set lead, duly pouncing on the opportunity. With the swagger back in his step at a crucial juncture, Alcaraz sought to bring the crowd into the contest but Sinner remained unflustered in the tie-break. The first five points went with serve before Sinner whipped a forehand down the line and Alcaraz then steered a drop-shot wide. A tame return into the net gave Sinner four set points. Alcaraz saved two before Sinner unleashed a blistering cross-court forehand to move to within a set of the trophy. It all looked to be going his way when he broke Alcaraz to begin the third set, but the Spaniard refused to surrender his title quietly and rattled off four games on the bounce to lead 4-1. Alcaraz lost serve at 5-3 but promptly broke to love to force a fourth set, lapping up the roars of the Court Philippe Chatrier crowd. That ended Sinner's run of 31 consecutive sets won at Grand Slams. Alcaraz saved a break point in the third game amid a series of holds as Sinner doubled down. The Italian appeared to be closing in on victory when he broke at 3-3 to approach the finish line. But Alcaraz had other ideas as he staved off three championship points at 3-5 and then broke Sinner when he tried to seal the title on his serve. Successive aces spurred a reinvigorated Alcaraz on in the tie-break and into a decisive fifth set. A despairing Sinner lost his serve right away and his gloom deepened as Alcaraz saved two break points to pull 3-1 ahead, but incredibly there was another twist. Alcaraz this time faltered with the title within his grasp as Sinner broke while trailing 5-3 to spark a three-game burst that left the Spaniard needing to hold serve to prolong the final. He kept his nerve to set up a 10-point tie-break, which Alcaraz ran away with as the outrageous shotmaking continued until the very end when he took his first championship point with a sizzling forehand.--AFP

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