The landscape of tennis was dominated by three players for nearly two decades, namely Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, and Rafael Nadal.
Alexander Zverev compared the Italian to the Serb, but the ATP No.1 made it clear that Nole was practically unbeatable, when in top form
The final matches for men's and women's singles at the 2025 Australian Open have been set. On the men's side, it is the top two ranked players in the world: Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev.
Grigor Dimitrov is also out of Rotterdam after suffering an injury in Australia, while World No.3 Alcaraz is now the top seed. Big guns Daniil Medvedev and de Minaur are set to play, with the Aussie hoping to go one better than his runner-up finish to Sinner in 2024.
Alexander Zverev has said that Jannik Sinner is "very similar" to Novak Djokovic after he was defeated by the Italian in the Australian Open final.
Sinner added to Alexander Zverev's grand slam misery, winning 6-3 7-6 (7-4) 6-3 on Rod Laver Arena. It meant he joined all-time legends Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer in winning three-straight majors on hard courts, after also triumphing at the Australian and US Opens in 2024.
Jannik Sinner joined some of tennis' greatest legends with another stellar performance in the Australian Open final.
Jannik Sinner swept Ben Shelton in straight sets while Alexander Zverev advanced Friday through an injury-related retirement from Novak Djokovic, setting up a 2025 Australian Open final between the Italian and German.
One of three men with a win percentage of over 90%, eight-time Grand Slam winner Connors spent 268 weeks atop the ATP Rankings during his legendary career. The American won 408 of 453 matches contested while ranked as the world No 1, a win percentage of 90.1% that ranks him third in this countdown.
Many called Jannik Sinner the best player in the world after he won his third Grand Slam at the 2025 Australian Open. Naomi Osaka's coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, disagrees with that analysis.
Sam Querrey brutal on Jannik Sinner’s win in Australia. Former tennis player Sam Querrey at the microphones of his Nothing Major podcast did not mince words in analyzing the Aus