
Sinner picks up where he left off as Alcaraz's main rival at French Open
PARIS :Jannik Sinner's dazzling winning streak ground to a halt ahead of the French Open but the world number one's top-notch return from a three-month doping ban suggests he will be the main challenger to Carlos Alcaraz in Paris.
The 23-year-old had won 26 straight matches before losing 7-6(5) 6-1 to Alcaraz in the Italian Open final on Sunday.
The defeat also ended a streak of 94 consecutive matches in which he had won at least one set — a run dating back to 2023 when he was beaten by Novak Djokovic at the ATP Finals.
Sinner agreed a settlement with the World Anti-Doping Agency in February and began an immediate three-month suspension after authorities accepted that the anabolic agent clostebol had entered his system via massages from his physiotherapist.
The three-times Grand Slam champion had not played since winning the Australian Open in January and he viewed the Italian Open as a chance to rebuild his momentum ahead of Roland Garros.
Despite failing to get his hands on the trophy, the Italian left Rome with encouraging signs ahead of the claycourt Grand Slam.
He battled through foot pain during the tournament, managing tight wins over Francisco Cerundolo and Tommy Paul, and showed glimpses of the aggressive baseline game and superb returning that have lifted him to the top of the rankings.
"It was a great week for me in many ways,' Sinner told reporters in Rome. 'I am closer than expected to my best tennis after a little time away, and I've found good sensations on clay.'
Alcaraz's victory in Rome gave the Spaniard two elite clay titles this spring following his triumph in Monte Carlo, and the rivalry between the young guns has become the most compelling in men's tennis.
Alcaraz leads their head-to-head meetings 7-4 and it would be no surprise if the pair were battling in the Paris final.
Sinner's improved physical conditioning has been one of the key factors in his rise, though the lingering foot blister he battled in Rome raised questions about his durability over a gruelling best-of-five format.
Yet the Italian remains optimistic.
'Surely I will beat you in Paris,' he joked to Alcaraz during the trophy ceremony in Rome, setting the stage for another potential showdown on Court Philippe-Chatrier.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
26 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Cristiano Ronaldo fires Portugal into Nations League final
Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates scoring the winning goal with teammate Nuno Mendes, who assisted him during the match. PHOTO: EPA-EFE MUNICH - Cristiano Ronaldo scored the winner as Portugal fought back to beat Germany 2-1 on June 4 and reach the Nations League final. Germany took the lead in the 48th minute, as Florian Wirtz headed in unmarked in the box, following a pinpoint lobbed pass from Joshua Kimmich. However, Portugal turned the match around, first equalising through substitute Francisco Conceicao in the 63rd minute, before Ronaldo tapped in five minutes later to send the visitors into the final. Spain and France will clash in the other semi-final on June 5 to decide who will face Portugal in the decider on June 8. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
35 minutes ago
- CNA
Ronaldo fires Portugal into Nations League final
MUNICH : Cristiano Ronaldo scored the winner as Portugal fought back to beat Germany 2-1 on Wednesday and reach the Nations League final. Germany took the lead in the 48th minute, as Florian Wirtz headed in unmarked in the box, following a pinpoint lobbed pass from Joshua Kimmich. However, Portugal turned the match around, first equalising through substitute Francisco Conceicao in the 63rd minute, before Ronaldo tapped in five minutes later to send the visitors into the final. Spain and France will clash in the other semi-final on Thursday to decide who will face Portugal in the decider on Sunday.

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Sabalenka and Swiatek set for French Open semi-final blockbuster
PARIS - The French Open women's singles semi-finals take centre stage at Roland Garros on Thursday, when world number one Aryna Sabalenka meets four-times champion Iga Swiatek in a match worthy of a title clash. In the other last-four encounter, wildcard Lois Boisson will look to continue her inspired run on home soil when she plays 2022 runner-up Coco Gauff. SABALENKA, SWIATEK SET FOR BLOCKBUSTER Belarusian Sabalenka has been the poster girl for Grand Slam consistency in the last few years, storming into the semi-finals in nine of the last 10 majors she has competed in to emerge as a genuine threat to Swiatek's supremacy on Parisian clay. The 27-year-old top seed's growing composure and mental fortitude on the biggest stage means that the wobbles she once experienced have become distant memories, while her retooled serve and power can blow away opponents on any surface. She has harnessed all those qualities during her run to the last four without conceding a set, dismantling Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen 7-6(3) 6-3 in the last round. Swiatek, who is on a 26-match winning run at the French Open, represents the biggest test in Sabalenka's bid to win a maiden Roland Garros title and add more silverware to her trophy cabinet that contains U.S. and Australian Open crowns. Having locked down the top ranking since April 2022, the duo renew their rivalry having become a little closer after making a TikTok video at last year's season-ending WTA Finals in Riyadh and practising together thereafter. "Before, there wasn't any communication or any practice with her, but now we're getting better. We get along and we practise more often. We know each other well," Sabalenka said. "We've had a lot of great battles in the past ... I'm super excited to go out there and to fight and to do everything I need to get the win." GULF IN CLASS ON CLAY Fifth seed Swiatek leads the overall head-to-head record with Sabalenka at 8-4 but the gulf in class on clay is a little more evident at 5-1 in favour of the 24-year-old. Having moved on from a distracting doping case for which she served a month-long ban last year, Swiatek has had to fight hard at her favourite hunting ground this year to beat Elena Rybakina in three sets before overcoming Elina Svitolina last time out. Swiatek may need to call upon that battling mentality again when she faces a hungry Sabalenka, whose only claycourt victory over the reigning Paris champion came in the 2023 Madrid final. "I know what I'm fighting about and I know that my game is somewhere there even when the moment is tough. At Roland Garros I should always push until the end and fight for everything ... I maybe believe it a bit more," Swiatek said. "I don't know if she elevates my game. Against every player, we play a different way so it's hard to compare. But our rivalry is pushing both of us." GAUFF FACES BOISSON, FRENCH CROWD American second seed Coco Gauff will be up against not just a plucky Boisson but the partisan French crowd as well when the 2022 runner-up takes on the wildcard in the other semi-final, hoping to take a step towards a second major title. "I've been in crowds where they're 99% for me, so I don't have an issue with it. I hope everyone will be respectful and things. If not, it's cool," Gauff said before the 361st-ranked Boisson stunned sixth seed Mirra Andreeva. "It makes sports exciting and I can't get irritated at the fact that someone's rooting for their hometown hero, because I would do the same. It's something I'll mentally prepare for if it were to happen and expect and be ready for." FRENCH OPEN ORDER OF PLAY ON THURSDAY (prefix number denotes seeding) COURT PHILIPPE-CHATRIER (not before 1300 GMT) 1-Aryna Sabalenka (Belarus) v 5-Iga Swiatek (Poland) Lois Boisson (France) v 2-Coco Gauff (United States) REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.