
Jannik Sinner ends Terence Atmane's dream run to reach Cincinnati Open final
Sinner, playing on his 24th birthday, won a remarkable 91% of his first-serve points, did not face a single break point during the 86-minute match and converted two of five break points in his first career meeting with Atmane, the world No 136.
'Very, very tough challenge,' Sinner said on court after being serenaded with Happy Birthday by the crowd. 'Every time when you play against someone completely new it's very difficult.
'I knew that I had to be very, very careful and my mindset today was in a good spot. I feel like I handled situations on the court very well.'
The Italian world No 1 had his hands full throughout a tightly contested first set which featured an imperious serving display from both men and not a single break point opportunity for either player.
Sinner, who lost only three points on serve in the opening set, held to love for a third consecutive game to force the tie-break, where Atmane handed his opponent the first point with a double fault and from there the Italian never looked back.
The reigning US Open, Australian Open and Wimbledon champion opened the second set with a nine-minute hold of serve, then held to love before finally breaking Atmane for a 3-1 lead that gave him the cushion he needed.
Sinner followed that with another hold to love to go 4-1 up and all but end any hope for Atmane, who beat the top-10 players Taylor Fritz and Holger Rune en route to his maiden ATP Masters 1000 semi-final.
With Atmane serving at 2-5 and looking to stay in the match, Sinner quickly jumped ahead 0-40 before sealing the win on his third match point when the Frenchman sent a forehand into the net. Sinner will face either the No 2 seed, Carlos Alcaraz, or Alexander Zverev in Monday's final.

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