Carlos Alcaraz live score: The exciting young tennis star is aiming to reach the quarter-finals of Wimbledon for the first time and comes up against Italian ...
Alcaraz and Sinner will be making their way to court shortly. 3.25pm: Alcaraz and Sinner will be on Centre Court following the conclusion of Heather Watson and Jule Niemeier's match. Alcaraz then smashes a forehand wide, 30-30. A cross-court backhand winner from Alcaraz is the shot of the match so far to level the scores. Sinner gets it as Alcaraz switches things up with a drop shot but it fails to go over. Sinner hits a fierce forehand to the right side of the court, 15-15. Sinner hits a deft drop shot to take the opening point. Alcaraz takes Sinner to deuce twice. Alcaraz deceives Sinner with a drop shot but it just fails creep over the net, 15-15. Alcaraz then opts for a drop shot at the wrong time which doesn't come off and follows up with a forehand into the net. Alcaraz practically jogs to the net to hit an overhead smash as Sinner could only return it high off the serve, 30-15. Alcaraz blasts a forehand way long.
Jannik Sinner found his groove on the grass on Sunday afternoon at Wimbledon, where he produced a stunning display to seal a straight-sets win against ...
The Spaniard showed resilience again in the tie-break, fending off two match points before converting his fourth set point to stay alive in the match. A solitary break in the fourth game proved decisive, and the Italian converted his sixth match point having struck 35 winners. The tactic paid off, as Sinner reeled off five games in a row to breeze to the opening set.
Italian won 6-1, 6-4, 6-7 (8), 6-3 to stun his teenage opponent in a match between the two youngest players left in the men's draw.
Alcaraz saved five match points on his own serve at 2-5, but could do nothing about the sixth, as Sinner thrashed a final winner. A Sinner forehand went long – and they went to a fourth set. A rocket of a return that painted the baseline earned Sinner a break at the start of the second, but Alcaraz finally found some rhythm. Just as Alcaraz looked to be getting on top, Sinner broke for 3-1 and held nervously from 0-40 for 4-1. His first ace of nine on Sunday was his 43rd for the tournament and he has been banging them down at up to 135mph. While both were as green as the grass – six matches on the surface for Alcaraz, eight for Sinner – the Spaniard’s bigger game looked suited to it.
The young talents made their Centre Court debuts hours after Wimbledon celebrated the main stage's 100th anniversary, and they provided a foil to a ...
You are playing and knowing all the historic matches that were played there that were so important to the game. Though seeded 10th at Wimbledon, Sinner had never won a match on grass on the main tour until arriving at the All England Club, but it was difficult to understand why as he navigated the grass and generated huge punching power with his groundstrokes against Alcaraz off shots hit from all different kinds of heights. I have to manage the nerves better. The temptation to end the exchange was understandable. Sinner has made a smart hire this summer, employing Darren Cahill, a former player, veteran coach and ESPN analyst, as a grass-court consultant. “But it’s more knowing all the story behind this court. Sinner will now face Djokovic, the three-time defending champion at Wimbledon, in the quarterfinals after Djokovic defeated Tim van Rijthoven, a late-blooming Dutch wild-card entrant, 6-2, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, on Sunday night. Sinner was setting a torrid pace from the baseline, but it was a testament to Alcaraz’s talent and competitive fire that he turned a potential straight-sets defeat into something much more compelling. It certainly looks that way, and they have been the present of the game at times, upsetting their elders, winning tour titles and reaching the quarterfinals at Grand Slam tournaments. That seemed to be the key statistic. “I think what we showed today, it’s a great level of tennis, great attitude from both of us,” Sinner said. I think it’s just great for tennis to have also some new names, new players.”
Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz are hopeful their maiden meeting at a Grand Slam will be the start of many blockbuster clashes following a thrilling ...
- Wimbledon - Wimbledon - Wimbledon - Wimbledon - Wimbledon - Wimbledon But I would say I’m going to be a great player here.” Now I’m thinking that I could be a great player on grass. Jannik was the better player and he deserves it! For me was a privilege today to go for the first time there in the Centre Court. Obviously Jannik is one of the best tennis players in the world as well. We have a good relationship,” the Spanish fifth seed explained.
Jannik Sinner beat Carlos Alcaraz 6-1, 6-4, 6-7 (8), 6-3 on Sunday evening to reach his first Wimbledon quarter-final.
“It’s tough when you have match point and you still have to play, but you know I tried my best – it’s just part of the game,” Sinner said. “Match after match, I was better and then I won my first grass-court match here in the first round, and now I’m here in the quarterfinals. “It’s part of part of tennis, and obviously I’m very happy how how I reacted because in the fourth set in the beginning, I was struggling and he tried to go over, so yeah, I’m very happy to be to be the next round.”
Even when Carlos Alcaraz snatched away two match points during a spellbinding third-set tiebreak, the Italian did not flinch. When three more match points ...
“If you’re scheduled last on the Centre, you’re going to end up a match under the roof, which changes the conditions, the style of play, the way you move on the court. It’s one of those unique moments that you get to live as a tennis player, and I’ll cherish it. This year play was scheduled over all 14 days of the tournament, bringing an end to the tradition of a day off on the middle Sunday to allow the grass courts to recover. “But I think most of the players would probably agree that we would all want the start of the match on Centre Court pushed earlier.” The lights. At 6-6 in the third set, it was game on in the battle of the belting forehands.