Sinner has appeared as a standout player on the ATP Tour for the past 18 months, with a machine-like tennis brand reminiscent of 24-time major champion Novak Jjokovic on Prime.
It appears that a gentle manager Italian would rarely come and go in or out of court. This is even a controversy over the doping incident that shook the sport.
Thinner agreed to a three-month ban with the world’s doping agency shortly after maintaining the Australian open title in January. That means he didn’t miss the Grand Slam tournament and was able to replace him with Roland Garros.
It seemed he had never left.
Thinner didn’t drop a set on his way to his Maiden French Open Final, serving only three times in six games.
However, his serve quickly received strong pressure against Alcaraz with an elongated start that included a 12-minute opening game.
The quality of his service game varied as the contest declined and flowed, but landing 54% of his first serves throughout the match was a statistical statistic.
Alcaraz broke him seven times as a result and flocked to Sinner’s second service to control the tiebreak in the final set.
Given that he is still in the early stages of his comeback, questions were raised about the fitness and durability of the sinner if the finals were long, but he answered them in the longest match of his career.
Then he spoke to his team and he said, “We did our best today. We gave everything we had.
“A while ago, we would have wanted to be here. [in the final] So it was still a great tournament. ”