Jannik Sinner gets past Holger Rune
at the Australian Open in a match with net and medical delays
Send a link to a friend
[January 20, 2025]
By HOWARD FENDRICH
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — First came the medical timeouts, one
each for Jannik Sinner and Holger Rune with the temperature above 90
degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) at the Australian Open. Then came
the unusual sight of a 20-minute delay because the net at Rod Laver
Arena detached from the court after being hit by a big Sinner serve.
In the end, Sinner put his physical struggles aside and emerged with
the victory — as he keeps doing, no matter the site or the
circumstances — and the defending champion moved into the
quarterfinals at Melbourne Park on Monday by eliminating the
13th-seeded Rune 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
The No. 1-ranked Sinner occasionally tried to cool off by pressing a
cold towel to his face or pouring water down the back of his neck.
He was far better down the stretch, both after a 10-minute-plus
delay in the third set when he went to the locker room for medical
attention and after a 20-minute holdup in the fourth when the screw
connecting the net to the blue playing surface came undone.
“I knew in my mind ... I would struggle today,” Sinner said during
his on-court interview, without saying what was wrong. "Me and the
doctor, we talked a little bit. It helped me."
He has won 18 consecutive tour-level matches, dating to late 2024.
Last season, Sinner went 73-6 with eight titles, the first man with
that many tournament championships in a single year since Andy
Murray in 2016.
That haul included Sinner’s first two Grand Slam trophies, at the
Australian Open in January and the U.S. Open in September, the
latter shortly after he was exonerated for testing positive for an
anabolic steroid twice in March. His case is still unresolved,
though, with a hearing scheduled for April in the World Anti-Doping
Agency’s appeal of the ruling.

Rune, a 21-year-old from Denmark, was trying to get to the
quarterfinals in Melbourne for the first time.
Sinner will face No. 8 Alex de Minaur of Australia or unseeded Alex
Michelsen of the U.S. for a berth in the semifinals. A second
Italian joined Sinner in the quarterfinals when 55th-ranked Lorenzo
Sonego got that far at a major tournament for the first time by
ending the run of American qualifier Learner Tien 6-2, 6-3, 3-6,
6-1. Sonego will now face No. 21 Ben Shelton of the U.S. or Gael
Monfils of France.
The men’s quarterfinals Tuesday will be Novak Djokovic vs. Carlos
Alcaraz, and Alexander Zverev vs. Tommy Paul.
In the women’s fourth round, Madison Keys, the 2017 U.S. Open
runner-up, eliminated 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina 6-3,
1-6, 6-3, and now plays Elina Svitolina, a 6-4, 6-1 winner against
Veronika Kudermetova. Svitolina and Monfils are married. The other
women’s matches Monday were Emma Navarro vs. Daria Kasatkina, and
Iga Swiatek vs. Eva Lys at night.
[to top of second column] |

Jannik Sinner of Italy reacts during his fourth round match against
Holger Rune of Denmark at the Australian Open tennis championship in
Melbourne, Australia, Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

The first signs of trouble for Sinner came with
Rune serving at 3-all in the second set.
After lunging for a shot behind the baseline and stumbling slightly,
Sinner clutched at his upper left leg and looked as though he might
be bothered by some sort of discomfort, although it wasn’t entirely
clear what was going on.
After Rune held there, Sinner walked slowly to the sideline for the
ensuing changeover and was breathing heavily during the time between
games. When play resumed, Rune earned his first break point of the
match, and Sinner handed it over with a double-fault that made his
deficit 5-3.
Rune closed out that set, and Sinner momentarily sat on his bench
before walking slowly off the court and toward the locker room.
It was a muggy afternoon, and long, physical points left both
players spent. After a pivotal, 37-stroke exchange in the third —
claimed by Sinner with a cross-court swinging forehand volley
passing winner after bringing Rune forward with a drop shot — each
man leaned over with hands on his knees, gasping for air. One of
Sinner’s coaches, Darren Cahill, stood in his courtside box and
raised his left fist.
Then, during the changeover at 3-2 in the third set, Sinner asked
the chair umpire to call for a trainer, and told a ball kid to bring
him a bottle of something to drink from his team. Sinner’s pulse was
checked, and then he trudged off with a towel draped around his beck
and a bottle in each hand, accompanied by a doctor.
When action resumed, Rune was the one playing a bit recklessly and
without an effective game plan, and he got broken to trail 5-3 —
then immediately requested his own medical check, during which his
right knee was massaged by a trainer. That might actually have
helped Sinner.
“It was, for sure, very, very tough,” Sinner said. “I knew in my
mind that he had some very long matches before this one, so I tried
to stay there mentally.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |