Top 5 This Week

Related Posts

Sinner vs Zverev: Australian Open final preview – start time, how to follow | Tennis News


Who: Jannik Sinner vs Alexander Zverev
What: Australian Open men’s singles final
Where: Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne, Australia
When: Sunday, January 26 at 7:30pm (08:30 GMT)
Follow Al Jazeera’s live build-up before our text and photo stream of the match.

Defending champion Jannik Sinner will look to seal back-to-back Australian Open titles and deny second seed Alexander Zverev a maiden Grand Slam crown in the men’s final on Sunday.

Also on Sunday, the women’s doubles final sees top seeds Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend face Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-Wei and Latvian Jelena Ostapenko.

After a thrilling women’s final on Saturday, in which Madison Keys ended Aryna Sabalenka’s two-year reign as Australian Open champion, Al Jazeera focuses on what promises to be another blockbuster finale between the two top seeds.

Who is the favourite to win the Australian Open men’s final?

A year after overhauling Daniil Medvedev in five sets in the 2024 final, Jannik Sinner will be favourite to win Sunday’s decider and become the first man to retain the title since Novak Djokovic’s “three-peat” from 2019-21.

Top seed Sinner would become the 11th man to go back-to-back in the professional era, joining the likes of Roger Federer (2006-07, 2017-18) and Andre Agassi (2000-01).

Having won the US Open last year, Sinner could also become the first Italian to win three Grand Slam titles, moving past his tie with Nicola Pietrangeli, a back-to-back winner of the men’s singles at Roland Garros (1959-60).

Jannik Sinner of Italy celebrates with the winner’s trophy, after defeating Daniil Medvedev of Russia in the men’s singles final at the 2024 Australian Open [Mike Frey-USA TODAY Sports/Reuters]

How did Sinner reach the final?

Sinner arrives in the final in top form, having won his last 20 matches.

He thrashed Australian number one Alex De Minaur in the quarterfinals and also beat rising American talent Ben Shelton in straight sets in the semis.

Physically, though, it has not all been smooth sailing for the 23-year-old, who suffered a cramp against Shelton and had dizzy spells on a hot day during his four-set win over Holger Rune in the fourth round.

With a maximum 27 degrees Celsius (81 F) forecast on Sunday, Sinner may be relieved that the match is scheduled in the evening cool.

What has happened to Sinner’s doping case?

His run to the final has come while a longstanding doping case stemming from failed drug tests last March hangs over his head.

Though cleared to play by tennis’s integrity authority, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) is seeking a ban of up to two years for the Italian at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). The hearing is set for April.

What has Sinner said before the final?

Sinner has so far proved impervious to external distractions, though, and the extra weight of being defending champion.

“I’m trying to take the things away in my head, the pressure,” he said. “Even if it’s easy to say, but difficult to do.

“I will try to do that and also enjoy these moments. We won six very, very tough matches.”

What chance does Zverev have in the final?

As a teenage up-and-comer, Zverev once generated the same level of excitement that Sinner enjoyed before his maiden Grand Slam title win at Melbourne Park in 2024.

However, predictions of major trophies have not come to pass for the 27-year-old German despite a couple of near-misses.

He was overhauled by Carlos Alcaraz in the French Open final last year when he was two sets-to-one ahead and also surrendered a two-set lead to fall to Dominic Thiem in the 2020 US Open decider.

Despite wielding a huge serve, one of the game’s most potent backhands and decent court movement for a 6 ft-6 in (1.98-metre) man, Zverev is vulnerable to wilting under pressure and has struggled to shrug off perceptions of mental fragility.

Is this a new start for Zverev?

Once shut down at the Grand Slams by Djokovic, Federer and Rafa Nadal, the younger generation led by Sinner and Alcaraz has more recently emerged to thwart Zverev’s ambitions.

Chastened by his French Open final loss to Alcaraz last year where he tired late in the match, Zverev re-hired trainer Jez Green to build staying power for five-set matches.

He comes into Sunday’s final relatively fresh after Djokovic retired injured after one set of their semifinal, which Zverev won.

Tennis - Australian Open - Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia - January 24, 2025 Serbia's Novak Djokovic shakes hands with the umpire after retiring from his semi final match against Germany's Alexander Zverev REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
Serbia’s Novak Djokovic, centre, shakes hands with the umpire after retiring from his semifinal against Germany’s Alexander Zverev [Tingshu Wang/Reuters]

What has Zverev said before the final?

With Sinner almost unmatched for the potency and accuracy of his shot-making, Zverev’s best chance of victory may be in dragging the Italian into a long dogfight and putting his serve to work in tiebreaks.

“Again, my goal is still to compete with the big guys and to compete for these kinds of tournaments and try to win them,” said Zverev.

“I’m looking forward to Sunday. I do feel like I have done the work, and I do feel like I’m ready for it.”

Head-to-head

Zverev holds a 4-2 winning record over Sinner which includes hardcourt victories at the 2021 and 2023 US Open tournaments.

But Sinner won their last match on hardcourt at Cincinnati last year when he was virtually untouchable.

What’s the prize money?

The total prize money is $59.8m, a 12 percent increase from 2024.

The Australian Open will hand out a $2.16m reward for singles champions and men’s and women’s doubles champion teams will receive $502,000.

The breakdown in the singles category (men and women) is:

Champions: $2.16m
Runners-up: $1.17m
Semifinalists: $0.68m
Quarterfinalists: $412,242
Round of 16: $260,363
Third round: $179,759
Second round: $123,974
First round: $81,822

Where to watch, follow and stream the Australian Open tennis Grand Slam?

Al Jazeera will provide live text and photo coverage of the men’s and women’s singles finals.

The official broadcasters of the Australian Open are:

Africa: beIN Sports and SuperSport.
Europe: Eurosport, SRG SSR.
Asia Pacific & Oceania: ESPN, Tennis Channel, beIN Sports, CCTV, iQIYI, GDTV, WOWOW, Nine, Stan Sport, Digicel, CJ ENM, TDM, ESPN International, SKY, Sportcast and K-Plus.
India & subcontinent: Sony Sports Network.
Latin America & Caribbean: ESPN International.
Middle East: beIN Sports.
North America: ESPN, TSN, RDS and Tennis Channel.
Central Asia: Sony Sports Network and Eurosport.



LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles