[April 01, 2024]
(Reuters) -Jannik Sinner dominated Grigor Dimitrov 6-3 6-1 on
Sunday to win the Miami Open for the first time and rise to world
number two.
The Italian fired a passing shot howling by his Bulgarian opponent
for a crucial break in the first set and captured the opener with a
brilliant backhand winner that brought the fans at Hard Rock Stadium
to their feet.
The 32-year-old Dimitrov, who has experienced a career renaissance
this season, had no answer for Sinner's flawless game in the second
set and was broken again when his backhand landed in the net to fall
behind 3-1.
Dimitrov badly missed an overhead to hand Sinner the 5-1 lead and
did not even try to chase down Sinner's backhand winner on
championship point.
Sinner won 88% of his first serve points and thumped 15 winners to
capture the title in South Florida after finishing as the runner-up
in 2021 and 2023.
"I raised my level dramatically for semis and final, which I've
shown on the court and obviously the result is amazing," Sinner
said.
"I felt like I was serving really well in the important moments
which gives me a lot of confidence... Physically I feel good, I feel
fresh even now."
Australian Open champion Sinner, who scooped a second Masters 1000
title following his success in Canada last year, has won 25 of his
last 26 matches and has only lost three times since last year's U.S.
Open.
The 22-year-old will take over the world number two ranking from his
rival Carlos Alcaraz on Monday and said he knows that he has a
target on his back heading into the claycourt season.
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Mar 29, 2024; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Jannik Sinner (ITA) waves to
the fans after his match against Daniil Medvedev (not pictured) in a
men's singles semifinal of the Miami Open at Hard Rock Stadium.
Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports/File Photo
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"Hopefully I can improve because the opponents are
going to come for me," he said.
Pritha Sarkar and Toby Davis)"They are going to play freely, they
are going to hit bigger and harder, and mentally I have to be ready.
"Now, new chapter, the clay is coming. Usually I struggle there a
little bit so let's see what I can achieve this time but this season
has been nearly perfect.
"I never expected it to be like this at the beginning of the year
but that's what happened. Now I am just living in the moment."
Sinner, who hails from the northern Italian village of San Candido,
said it was a great honour to be the highest-ranked Italian in the
history of the sport.
"Being number two is an incredible achievement," he said.
"I come from a very normal family. My dad is still going to work, my
mom also, so nobody would have expected this for sure. It's great to
be in this position."
(Reporting by Rory Carroll, editing by
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