Jannik Sinner to play Carlos Alcaraz in Wimbledon final

LONDONΒ βΒ Jannik Sinner overwhelmed a not-fully-fit Novak Djokovic 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 in the Wimbledon semifinals on Friday to set up a showdown for the championship against Carlos Alcaraz.
The No. 1-ranked Sinnerβs victory at Centre Court put him in his first final at the All England Club.
No. 2 Alcaraz defeated Taylor Fritz 6-4, 5-7, 6-3, 7-6 (6) earlier Friday to move within one victory of a third consecutive Wimbledon title.
Sinner, a 23-year-old Italian, and Alcaraz, a 22-year-old Spaniard, now head into a rematch of their epic final at the French Open four weeks ago. Alcaraz won that one after fending off three match points.
βHopefully itβs going to be a good match, like the last one,β Sinner said. βI donβt know if itβll get better, because I donβt think itβs possible.β
Alcaraz is 5-0in Grand Slam title matches. Sinner owns three major trophies.
They are far and away the leaders of menβs tennis β and are at the height of their games right now. This will be the seventh straight major tournament won by one of them.
βThe things we are doing right now are great for tennis,β Alcaraz said.
Alcaraz takes a career-best 24-match winning streak into Sunday. Sinner will be participating in his fourth consecutive Grand Slam final, after winning the U.S. Open last September and the Australian Open in January, before his heartbreaking defeat in Paris after wasting a two-set lead.
For the 38-year-old Djokovic, his lopsided loss brought an end to his latest bid for an eighth Wimbledon title β which would tie the menβs mark held by Roger Federer β and for an unprecedented 25th major trophy.
Djokovic was diminished two days after slipping and doing the splits on what he called a βnastyβ and βawkwardβ fall in the last game of his quarterfinal victory. He canceled a practice session Thursday, had his upper left leg checked by a trainer during a medical timeout after the second set against Sinner and was simply unable to move the way the world is so used to seeing.
Right after that treatment, Djokovic grabbed a 3-0 lead in the third set and was a point from going up 4-0. But Sinner took six of the remaining seven games.
βWe all saw, especially in the third set, that he was a bit injured,β Sinner said. βHeβs been in a very difficult situation.β
When it ended, Djokovic picked up his equipment bags and was given a standing ovation as he headed toward the locker room. He paused to smile, wave and give a thumbs-up to the crowd.
Djokovic exited in the semifinals at all three Slams this season, including quitting after a set against Alexander Zverev because of an injured hamstring at the Australian Open.
There was more intrigue in Fridayβs first semifinal, particularly when Fritz led 6-4 in the fourth-set tiebreake with two chances to force things to a fifth. But Alcaraz collected the next four points by forcing mistakes by Fritz to finish off the win, then rocked back on his heels, spread his arms wide and screamed.
βIβm just really proud about the way that I stayed calm,β Alcaraz said, βand (was) thinking clearly.β
With five-time Wimbledon champion Bjorn Borg and celebrities such as Anna Wintour and Leonardo DiCaprio looking on, Alcaraz marked some of his best shots with a shout of βVamos!β or a raised index finger.
βA lot of the things that I would have changed, I think would have only helped me for a point or two, and then I think Carlos would have just made an adjustment,β said the fifth-seeded Fritz, the runner-up to Sinner at the U.S. Open, βand I donβt think it would have been a long-term answer.β
The temperature topped 85 degrees Fahrenheit, with no clouds interrupting the blue sky overhead to offer protection from the sun. For the second consecutive day, spectators had trouble in the heat; there were two brief delays in one second-set game while fans needed to be helped.
As everyone paying attention β including Sinner β knows by now, Alcaraz is not just any foe.
βHe has so many different ways to win,β Fritz said, βand heβs very good at making adjustments.β