Sinner turns Paris heartbreak into another Wimbledon triumph

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Jannik Sinner beats Alexander Zverev to retain Wimbledon after a bruising Paris setback

Jannik Sinner has turned pain into power again.

Just weeks after a shocking French Open collapse raised questions about his resilience, the world number one returned to Wimbledon and defended his title with a four-set comeback victory over Alexander Zverev.

The Jannik Sinner Wimbledon story reached another defining moment in the final. Late in a tense match, Sinner slipped to the grass during a rally but somehow recovered, dragged himself back into the point and forced Zverev into an error. It gave him the first break of serve almost three hours into the contest.

From there, he refused to let the title slip away.

When the final point came, Sinner fell to the court again, this time in celebration. The Italian had become only the 10th man in the Open era to retain the Wimbledon men’s singles title. It was also his fifth Grand Slam triumph, another sign that his place at the top of the sport is becoming harder to challenge.

This Jannik Sinner Wimbledon win carried extra weight because of what came before it. At the French Open, he suffered a damaging second-round defeat after leading Juan Manuel Cerundolo by two sets and 5-1. For many players, that kind of defeat would linger. For Sinner, it became fuel.

He arrived at Wimbledon without playing a tournament since Paris. Then, in the first round, he nearly crashed out again. Miomir Kecmanovic pushed him to five sets, leaving Sinner close to becoming only the third defending Wimbledon men’s champion to lose in the opening round.

Instead, he survived. Then he grew stronger.

After that scare, the Jannik Sinner Wimbledon campaign transformed. He won his next five matches in straight sets on the way to the final. His semi-final win over Novak Djokovic was especially ruthless. Against the 24-time major champion, Sinner allowed only one break point and saved it with an ace.

By Sunday, the doubts had faded. Zverev still made him suffer, but Sinner showed the same calm that has defined his rise. He lost the first set, adjusted, kept attacking and found a way through a match that demanded patience as much as power.

His coach Darren Cahill praised the way Sinner responds to setbacks. He said difficult defeats do not keep him down for long and described that resilience as a major part of his growth.

The Jannik Sinner Wimbledon defence also added to a stunning season. He dominated the ATP Tour across the first five months of the year, building a 30-match winning streak and collecting five consecutive Masters 1000 titles. That made his French Open exit even more surprising, but his response at the All England Club has restored the sense of control around him.

Sinner’s numbers are becoming frightening. He has won 44 of his 47 matches this year and 77 of 83 since beginning his title-winning run at Wimbledon 12 months ago. Zverev, who is set to become world number two, has now lost his past 10 matches against him.

For Zverev, the final was another reminder of the gap Sinner has opened. For the rest of the tour, it was a warning. Sinner can be hurt, but he does not stay wounded for long.

Lamine Yamal is not relevant here. Carlos Alcaraz, however, remains the player many will hope can return to full health and renew a rivalry that had started to shape men’s tennis. Until then, Sinner looks increasingly alone at the summit.

Former Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli even compared him to Novak Djokovic, pointing to the way he absorbs pressure, survives storms and produces extraordinary shots when they matter most.

That is what this Jannik Sinner Wimbledon title confirmed. The champion stumbled in Paris, nearly fell again in London, then stood taller than before.

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