Sinner's Apotheosis: He Wins the Monte Carlo Final Against Alcaraz and Is Again World No. 1
The South Tyrolean prevailed over his Spanish rival with a score of 7-6, 6-3 in 2 hours and a quarter at the end of a match that was heavily influenced by the wind.(Handle)
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Jannik Sinner wins the Monte Carlo Masters 1000, the first major clay-court tournament of his career, and returns to world number 1. In the match that was worth the title and the top of the ranking, the South Tyrolean defeated Carlos Alcaraz with a score of 7-6(5), 6-3 in 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Jannik started down in both sets, but found the strength to recover and take home a major clay-court title, especially in the final against the great rival who defeated him last year in Rome and then (in a stinging way) in Paris. And he did it just days before the Sunshine Double.
The match was conditioned by the strong wind that shifted the trajectories and put the two athletes in difficulty , but the high number of unforced shots, due precisely to the weather conditions and the frantic pace that both impose on the exchange, should not be misleading: it is not the best match between the two champions but it is still a high-level match, full of content and very fast-paced exchanges.
The decisive factor was the greater consistency from the baseline (despite the violence and depth of his shots) and the aggressiveness in his response from the South Tyrolean, who was particularly harmful to the Spaniard from the left side.
First set
Alcaraz capitalized on Jannik's slow start and immediately took a 2-0 lead, but Sinner immediately counter-breaked and tied the score. The Italian would have had another break point, but Alcaraz managed to rally, and the two served until 4-all, with Jannik recovering from a dangerous 0-30 deficit in the eighth game . In the ninth game, the Murcian player escaped the quicksand and cancelled out another breakpoint thanks to an error from Sinner, who fired an easy forehand wide (by a wide margin). Jannik held the next game to 15, which he closed with a beautiful counter-drop, tying the score at 5-all. In the twelfth game, Sinner struggled, but recovered by regaining his serve and finishing a long game, without break points, to level the score at 6-all .
In the tiebreak, the South Tyrolean took the lead when, at 2-all, he sensed a call from Alcaraz and finished with a backhand, then advanced to 5-2 with his serve. The Murcian came back to 4-5 with an ace, and at 6-4, Sinner fired a forehand off the net, only to finish it off just outside the net. Alcaraz then regained the minibreak, but squandered it with a double fault, and after an hour and 14 minutes, Sinner took the first set: 7-5 in the tiebreak .
Second set
Alcaraz once again took the lead in the second set: Jannik came back from 15-40 down in the first game, but was forced to drop serve in the third due to some amazing defense from the Spaniard , who went up 2-1. Sinner had two chances to get back on level terms but failed to capitalize. Thus, as the wind continued to blow ever stronger over the Monte Carlo Country Club, Carlos attempted a mini-escape. But the counterbreak was only delayed; Sinner got it at the end of a long sixth game, tying the score. In the final, Jannik accelerated, going to 4-3 and earning another breakpoint, working Alcaraz's flanks and knocking him down with a forehand winner. A forehand error nullified him, and immediately afterward, a return and a subsequent forehand winner led to another break point. It was a good one, as Sinner hit a powerful forehand passing shot to go up 5-3 against an Alcaraz who had lowered his level in this final and appeared particularly nervous and error-prone . You can't afford that with Sinner: the next game is a formality, Jannik closes it out at 15 and seals the triumph.
Jannik's 27th title
This is Sinner's 27th career title, compared to Alcaraz's 26. It's also his eighth Masters 1000 title (the same number as Alcaraz), the fourth in a row after Paris 2025, Indian Wells, and Miami 2026. A steamroller that has racked up nothing but victories since March, 17. Jannik also achieved a very difficult hat trick: Indian Wells, Miami, and Monte Carlo in the same year. Only Novak Djokovic has achieved that in the history of tennis . A nearly impossible feat because these three tournaments—all top-level Masters 1000 tournaments—are so close together, with the transition from hard courts to clay courts in just a few days (Alcaraz, eliminated in the second round of Miami, had 10 more days to prepare for Monte Carlo).
The statements
"I don't know how to describe this week. Today we saw very high-level tennis from both players, despite the constantly shifting winds," commented Jannik Sinner. "Returning to No. 1 is important, but the ranking is secondary. I'm happy to have finally won a major tournament on this surface."
And Alcaraz, during the awards ceremony, crowned him: "It's impressive what you're achieving. In the Open Era, only Novak Djokovic had managed the Sunshine Double and won Mont Carlo, which shows how difficult it is. Congratulations on what you and your team are doing. I'm really happy to see you win so many titles in front of your family. It wasn't the ending I wanted, but I loved every single day here."
Davide Lombardi
