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Sinner sinks Griekspoor, sets De Minaur title match in Rotterdam
Spoiler:
Italian notches 14th straight win, now eyes World No. 3 mark
February 17, 2024
Jannik Sinner in action against Tallon Griekspoor on Saturday night at the ABN AMRO Open in Rotterdam.
By ATP Staff
Jannik Sinner hit his stride and barely looked back on Saturday night at the ABN AMRO Open.
The top seed downed home hope Tallon Griekspoor 6-2, 6-4 to reach his second straight final at the ATP 500 in Rotterdam. Sinner took control early of his clash with Griekspoor, a rematch of the pair’s last-four meeting at the same venue a year ago, and ultimately wrapped an 82-minute victory with some of his best tennis of the week so far under the roof at Rotterdam Ahoy.
“Today, in a practice session beforehand, we tried to keep the intensity quite high, trying to feel the court and get into the rhythm a little bit,” said Sinner in his post-match interview. “I knew that today I had to raise the level, which I have done, and obviously I’m glad that I can play once more here in the final in Rotterdam.”
Sinner will take a 14-match winning steak into his 16th tour-level final, where his opponent will be fifth seed Alex de Minaur. The 22-year-old, who lifted his maiden Grand Slam trophy at the Australian Open last month, has not lost since his defeat to Novak Djokovic in the championship match at the 2023 Nitto ATP Finals.
Sinner had expressed a desire to raise his level after his quarter-final against Milos Raonic and the Italian wasted little time fulfilling that objective against Griekspoor. He broke serve in the opening game of the match and was soon a double break up at 5-1 as he struck the ball cleanly off both wings, offering a seemingly nervous Griekspoor little chance to find his feet in front of his home fans.
A year ago in Rotterdam, Griekspoor took 11 games off Sinner in a steely semi-final showing despite ultimately falling to a straight-sets defeat. This time around, the Dutch World No. 29 began to give a reminder of his ability in the second set, when he competed well and began to take the match to his opponent by firing plenty of big forehands to dictate rallies.
Griekspoor carved out two break points in both the fourth and sixth games of the second set, but some typically precise Sinner serving ensured he could not convert any of them. His comeback efforts were then badly undermined by a poor service game at 4-4 that handed a break to his opponent.
Sinner made no mistake in serving out from there to close a victory in which he saved all six break points he faced and won 79 per cent (23/29) of points behind first serves, according to Infosys ATP Stats.
Most tour-level wins in 2024 season
Player
Win-Loss Record
Grigor Dimitrov
13-3
Jannik Sinner
11-0
Hubert Hurkacz
11-5
Alex de Minaur
10-2
Andrey Rublev
10-2
“It’s just extra focus on important points, but obviously it is better not to get into the position to have to save the break points,” said Sinner when asked about how he had reacted under pressure against Griekspoor. “Today I served really well. I think I made first serves on all the break points, so it’s also part of the confidence. In another way, I felt much better on the court today and I think that helped me today.”
De Minaur, who earlier eased past Grigor Dimitrov 6-4, 6-3, has not won in six Lexus ATP Head2Head clashes with Sinner. Should the top seed extend that lead to 7-0 and lift the trophy, he will on Monday rise to a career-high No. 3 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings. That would be a record mark for an Italian man.
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“It would mean a lot [to win the title],” said Sinner, who first competed in Rotterdam as an 18-year-old wild card in 2020. “It’s a special place, as I’ve said many times. The tournament believed in me years ago, and this is my second final. Last year I lost in three sets, so every final is different.
“Let’s see what’s coming. I know [De Minaur] quite well, he knows me well, and I guess he’s going to change a couple of things. So tomorrow I have to be really prepared and ready and we will see what I am capable of.”
Top seed clinches second title of season
February 18, 2024
Jannik Sinner celebrates his second title of the season after triumphing in Rotterdam.
By ATP Staff
There is no stopping Jannik Sinner right now.
The Italian captured his second tour-level title of the season on Sunday when he defeated Alex de Minaur 7-5, 6-4 to win the ABN AMRO Open for the first time.
The 22-year-old produced his trademark style of clean-hitting, aggressive tennis to overpower the Australian in Rotterdam. Sinner struck 23 winners and recovered from squandering a break advantage in both sets to earn his 15th tour-level win in a row after two hours and five minutes. He holds a perfect 7-0 record in the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series.
Sinner, who captured his first major crown at the Australian Open last month, will rise to a career-high No. 3 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings on Monday. No Italian man has ever been as high.
"My team, we did a really good job a few weeks ago and now we made a very good job here," Sinner said. "I am really proud with the level that I played throughout this whole week. We have been in tough situations but we handled it the right way. We will always try to improve, it is the most important."
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Sinner has now won three consecutive ATP 500 events he has played (also Beijing and Vienna at the end of 2023). Following his Aussie Open run, the Italian played with confidence and purpose all week, dropping just one set at the indoor hard tournament for his 12th tour-level title.
The 2019 Next Gen ATP Finals champion has now won 32 of the past 34 matches. His only defeats have come against Ben Shelton in Shanghai and Novak Djokovic in the Nitto ATP Finals title match.
De Minaur will move to a career-high No. 9 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings on Monday. The Australian, who beat Grigor Dimitrov in the semi-finals, holds a 7-8 record in tour-level finals.
In a high-intensity clash, bruising baseline rallies were a common theme throughout the first set. After Sinner gained the break in the opener, he failed to serve out at 5-4, with De Minaur saving four set points to level. However, the Italian would not be denied, breaking immediately in the next game when De Minaur decided to leave a volley that landed in. The Italian then held comfortably to move ahead.
The top seed was made to dig deep at times in the second set against De Minaur, who pushed the Italian to the limit with his flat groundstrokes. However, as has been the case in recent months, Sinner had the answers. Just as in the first set, Sinner was pegged back after gaining the initial break, but he rallied and continued to hit through the fifth seed to win, raising his arms in delight.