Life Buzz News

Sinner one step from repeating Down Under


Sinner one step from repeating Down Under

Alexander Zverev of Germany serves to Novak Djokovic of Serbia during Friday's semifinal match at the Australian Open in Melbourne, Australia.

HOWARD FENDRICH Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia -- It's not often that a man is able to follow up his first Grand Slam title by repeating as the champion at the same tournament a year later, which is what Jannik Sinner will be trying to do Sunday when he faces Alexander Zverev in the Australian Open final.

The last time it happened was nearly 20 years ago: Rafael Nadal accomplished that sort of repeat at the 2005 and 2006 French Opens. He turned out OK.

For the No. 1-ranked Sinner, the past year also included the doping case that is still unresolved. He tested positive for a trace amount of an anabolic steroid twice in March, which didn't become public until his exoneration was announced shortly before the start of play at the U.S. Open -- which he won. There is a hearing in the World Anti-Doping Agency's appeal scheduled in April.

"He finds playing tennis matches to be his safe place. That's where he can go and do his thing and feel like this is what he knows, this is what he understands, what is what he's good at. It's become a home for him to step on to the court and play tennis," said one of Sinner's two coaches, Darren Cahill, who will leave the team after this season.

People are also reading... Former St. Paul, Castlewood, Virginia High basketball coach Wayne Rasnick passes away FRIDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP: Abingdon girls get long-awaited win over Wise Central; J.I. Burton boys lead Cumberland; Shelby Stanley (Eastside), Jeb Stuart (Patrick Henry), Carter Jones (West Ridge), Brodie Ratliff (John Battle), Wynnter Boyd (Richlands) also among many stars HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS: The wins keep coming for the Wise County Central girls TUESDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP: Brody Waddle (Northwood), Emmah McAmis (Wise Central), Katelynn Witt (Union), Colin Brown and Addie Wilhoit (Tennessee High), Kaiden Harris (Virginia High), Porter Gobble (John Battle), Ean Hayes (Wise Central) among many stars HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL: Graham boys and Wise Central girls win at UVa Wise THURSDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP: Caylee Sykes (Ridgeview), Gabe Foster (Holston), Rex Delp (George Wythe), Casey Addison (Richlands), Macy Osborne (Marion), Parker Jenkins (Gate City) among the many stars SATURDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP: Cole Caywood (Patrick Henry), Jaylen Dotson (Hurley), Tyler Stanley (Abingdon), Jaydyn Carrico (Gate City), Max Minor (Tennessee High), Luke Josey (Wise Central) among stars HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL: Graham is much more than a football school WEDNESDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP: Grundy, J.I. Burton,Graham girls, boys win; Cole Caywood (Patrick Henry), Maggie Hall (Rural Retreat) also on teams that prevailed HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL: Schwartz and Jones star as Chilhowie records Hogo sweep over Holston HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS: Virginia High boys put up more points in beating Lebanon, notching fifth straight win; VHS girls also prevail NFL: Tight end James Mitchell (Union), front-office man Ryan Cowden (Lebanon) have new homes Bluff City man charged in connection with Sunday shooting LOCALS IN COLLEGE NOTES: Haysi grad Cody Edwards is Concord's new football coach HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS: John Battle's Kara Kelley scores career-high 32 points, reaches 1K milestone in OT win over Graham G-Girls; Graham boys (7-0) top Trojans

"There's been a lot of pressure around him for the last nine months now, since April last year. He deals with it as well as anybody that I've ever seen deal with pressure," Cahill said. "He's an amazing young man that's been able to put that to one side. ... He has a clear conscience."

Over these two weeks in Australia, Sinner also dealt with health issues. He got medical attention when he felt dizzy and had an upset stomach during his fourth-round victory against No. 13 Holger Rune, then cramping late in his semifinal win over No. 21 Ben Shelton.

"There's a lot of things going on, on and off the court. I try to isolate myself a little bit, trying to be myself on the court. Sometimes it's a bit easier. There are days where it's easier, days where I struggle a little bit more," said Sinner, a 23-year-old from Italy who can become the youngest man to win consecutive championships at the Australian Open since Jim Courier in 1992-93.

"I'm just happy to put myself in this position again," Sinner said, "to play for a big trophy again."

Standing in his way is No. 2 Zverev, a 27-year-old from Germany who is 0-2 in previous major finals, losing both in five sets -- to Dominic Thiem at the 2020 U.S. Open after taking the first two sets and holding a match point, and to Carlos Alcaraz at last year's French Open after leading by two sets to one. Zverev won his semifinal in Paris last June hours after an out-of-court settlement was announced in Berlin that ended a trial stemming from an ex-girlfriend's accusation of assault during a 2020 argument.

Zverev got his spot in the Australian Open final -- play is scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. local time (3:30 a.m. EST) on Sunday -- when 24-time major champion Novak Djokovic stopped playing because of a torn muscle in his left leg just one set into their semifinal on Friday.

Djokovic, who was booed by some spectators when he left the court, posted an image of an MRI on social media early Sunday with the caption: "Thought I'd leave this here for all the sports injury 'experts' out there."

Sunday's title match will be the first at Rod Laver Arena between the men seeded 1 and 2 since No. 1 Djokovic defeated No. 2 Nadal in 2019.

"Jannik has been the best player in the world for the past 12 months," Zverev said. "There's no doubt about it."

That is not really up for debate.

Sinner went 73-6 in 2024 with eight titles, the most on the ATP Tour since 2016, and is currently on a 20-match winning streak that began late last season.

He is listed as a -275 money-line favorite against Zverev, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

But don't expect Sinner to proclaim that status or be willing to talk about himself in glowing terms.

"Back of my head, I also know that I'm 23 years old, and I am not perfect, no? I know that I have things still to improve. I have certain areas where I can get better. That's why we work," Sinner said. "Every day is a big challenge. Every day you have a different opponent. You try to understand what's happening. Sometimes you have some issues and then trying to understand that whatever works best for that day and trying to go for it."

Be the first to know

Get local news delivered to your inbox!

Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy.

Previous articleNext article

POPULAR CATEGORY

corporate

11016

tech

11384

entertainment

13523

research

6238

misc

14504

wellness

10784

athletics

14352