Sinner says early French Open exit aids Wimbledon prep

Jannik Sinner has credited his second-round exit at the French Open with giving him valuable extra training time ahead of his Wimbledon title defense.

In an interview with Vogue, the world number one described taking a week off after the Paris loss to spend time with family and friends before returning to training.

Sinner noted that the early exit allowed more preparation time for Wimbledon and the subsequent American hard-court swing.

He also provided a positive health update, stating that he feels good physically after medical checks and additional training.

Sinner holds a 37-3 record this season and faces no immediate threat to his top ranking.

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Jannik Sinner appearing distressed on the clay court at the French Open due to health issues.
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Jannik Sinner exits French Open after health scare

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Jannik Sinner lost to Juan Manuel Cerundolo in the second round of the French Open on May 28. The world No. 1 led by two sets before physical issues forced him off court. The defeat ended his 30-match winning streak.

Jannik Sinner, the defending champion, will enter Wimbledon without recent match practice on grass. The world No. 1 has expressed confidence in his fitness despite a recent French Open exit.

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World number one Jannik Sinner has declared a strict zero-tennis policy in the days leading up to the French Open. The Italian player, fresh from winning the Monte-Carlo, Madrid and Rome titles, wants to focus on physical recovery and family time instead of extra training.

Jannik Sinner completed the rare Sunshine Double by winning the Miami Open 6-4, 6-4 over Jiří Lehečka, becoming the eighth man to achieve the feat since Roger Federer's 2017 success. The world No. 2 plans to arrive in Monaco on Tuesday and resume practice on Thursday, though he admitted his body will hurt after the hard-court swing. Sinner sits just 1,190 points behind Carlos Alcaraz in the ATP rankings ahead of the clay-court season.

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World number one Jannik Sinner has decided to live independently in Monaco to support his tennis career and maintain privacy. The four-time Grand Slam champion left his family in Italy for the move.

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner defeated Alexander Zverev 6-1, 6-2 in the Madrid Open final to claim his fifth straight Masters 1000 title. The Italian has confirmed he will play in the upcoming Rome Masters, his home event set to start on May 6. Despite the physical toll, Sinner expressed excitement for the tournament.

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World No. 1 Jannik Sinner explained in a recent interview why his parents rarely attend his tennis matches. The comments came ahead of Wimbledon.

 

 

 

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