Sinner digs deep to down Djokovic in ATP Finals cracker
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[November 15, 2023]
TURIN (Reuters) -Novak Djokovic's winning streak was halted
at 19 matches as home favourite Jannik Sinner was roared to a superb
7-5 6-7(5) 7-6(2) victory by a partisan ATP Finals crowd in Turin on
Tuesday.
The earlier Green Group clash was a non-event as Stefanos Tsitsipas
retired injured against Holger Rune, but the evening ticket holders
were treated to a match of jaw-dropping quality.
After more than three hours of an absorbing toe-to-toe battle in
which neither player took a backward step it was world number four
Sinner who seized his chance in the deciding set tiebreak finally to
crack Djokovic's resistance.
Sinner, 14 years Djokovic's junior, wrapped up his first career win
against the 24-time Grand Slam champion with a smash - prompting
deafening roars from a sell-out crowd who produced an electrifying
atmosphere throughout.
He moves top of the group but is not yet guaranteed a semi-final
spot ahead of his final round-robin match against Rune on Thursday
when Djokovic, who will end the year as number one for a
record-stretching eighth time, plays alternate Hubert Hurkacz.
Sinner, Djokovic and Rune could all still end up with two wins each
in a group that is too close to call.
Sinner has enjoyed his best year on Tour and now has 59 match wins
in 2023, but none would have given him more pleasure than taking
down six-time ATP Finals champion Djokovic.
The Italian moved 2-0 ahead in the deciding tiebreak with a rocket
of a forehand return and then gave himself daylight with another
forehand winner to make it 3-0.
Once he moved 5-0 ahead not even Djokovic's powers of recovery could
spare the Serb his first loss since defeat by Carlos Alcaraz in the
Wimbledon final.
"It's a sort of process, I feel that I'm more confident in certain
moments," Sinner told Amazon Prime.
"In the second set tiebreak he played a bit better than me but I
think I was brave in the big moments. We were both serving very
well, I think we both played really, really well."
Reigning champion Djokovic did not do much wrong as he battled
Sinner and the crowd - regularly jesting with the fans who jeered
him throughout the duel.
Sinner made his move at 5-5 in the opening set as Djokovic briefly
lost focus after leading 40-0 on serve.
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Tennis - ATP Finals - Pala Alpitour, Turin, Italy - November 14,
2023 Italy's Jannik Sinner in action during his group stage match
against Serbia's Novak Djokovic REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane
A double-fault at deuce was cheered by the crowd
and Sinner then converted the break with two punishing backhands.
Sinner then held serve to love to move in front.
Djokovic raised his level a notch in the second set and dropped only
five points on his serve before the tiebreak which he edged to
extend the contest into a decider.
Sinner broke for a 4-2 lead but Djokovic broke back immediately.
When Sinner then moved 6-5 ahead on serve, Djokovic sat in his chair
and conducted the jeers before a calm service hold sent an epic
tussle into a shoot-out.
The smart money would have been on Djokovic to make a 20-match
unbeaten streak for the ninth time in his career, but Sinner had
other ideas as he chalked up one of the biggest wins of a career
that now seems on the verge of lift-off.
"To beat the world number one, who has 24 Grand Slams, that means a
lot, it's one of the top (wins)," he said.
The match statistics summed up the quality on offer with a combined
83 winners and only 25 unforced errors in a contest lasting three
hours and nine minutes.
Asked about the raucous crowd, Djokovic said: "I expected it, he's
the only Italian here and he's playing in Italy. There's a lot of
hype and he's in great form, so it's normal."
(Reporting by Martyn HermanEditing by Toby Davis, Shri Navaratnam
and Lincon Feast.)
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