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VIENNA CROWN GOES TO JANNIK SINNER AFTER EPIC SHOWDOWN WITH ZVEREV

Jannik Sinner captures his 4th title of the year, defeating Alexander Zverev 3-6, 6-3, 7-5 to win the Vienna Open. The Italian extends his indoor win streak to 21 matches in a thrilling comeback victory.

Vienna crown goes to Jannik Sinner after epic showdown with Zverev
Jannik Sinner lifts 24th ATP title following Vienna battle victory - Image credit: Getty Images

Jannik Sinner won the Vienna Open for the second time. In two hours and twenty-eight minutes, the top seed defeated the second seed, Alexander Zverev, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, to win his 24th ATP championship and fourth of the year.

It was the Italian's fourth triumph in their ninth encounter. Only three breaks were seen, and the favorite won his 21st straight indoor triumph with a late one in the last moments of the match.

At 75%, Alexander served. Despite his best efforts, he was unable to score as many points behind the first and second serves. The German took two breaks while playing against eight break points.

Jannik finished first to earn 500 ATP points and stay in the year-end no. 1 fight after denying three of four break attempts. The world number two made 21 unforced errors and 46 winners. 

They remained tied in the segment after firing 60 service winners. Before the decisive tie break, Sinner won that segment and sealed the deal by outplaying his opponent in the longest exchanges.

In the first game of the battle, Zverev surged ahead with a break at 2-1 after saving a break point. Alexander served for the first game at 5-3, and they each saved two break points in games five and six.

He finished the first half of the duel in 46 minutes with a backhand winner on a set point. Jannik maintained pressure on his opponent and served well in sets two and three. 

The pressure on the opposing team increased as the 2023 champion only dropped a few points in his games in the second set. After Sinner's backhand winner in the second game, Zverev took a breather and wasted a game point.

A few minutes later, the Italian managed to keep everything under control and held at love for 3-0. After an hour and a half, world no. 2 introduced a decider and gained momentum when he served for the set at 5-3 and landed an ace. 

Jannik played well in the other games after surviving a deuce in the second one. In the sixth set, the German kept himself in the game by denying two break points. They reached 5-5 and served brilliantly in the next games. 

In game 11, Alexander missed a straightforward volley on a game point. Sinner created the vital edge by painting a backhand down the line winner for a break point and seizing it following the opponent's backhand error.

Jannik lifted a trophy and won his fourth ATP championship of the year after serving for the match at 6-5 and holding at love with a service winner.

BREAKING: AUSTRALIAN OPEN SEEDING AT RISK! CHECK THE NEW 18-TOURNAMENT RANKING RULE NOW

The 2026 ATP season begins with a major rule change. Rankings now count only 18 tournaments, causing points to drop for the Top 10.

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Which tennis superstars just lost points to the new system?

The 2026 ATP Tour season kicks off with the United Cup this Friday. Everyone's watching to see what happens in men's tennis this year.

There's a ranking rule change that started late in 2025 that everyone will be dealing with.

Here’s a breakdown of the change and who it's impacting:

What's the New Rule?

Before 2026, a player's ATP ranking could include points from 19 tournaments: the four Grand Slams, the eight mandatory Masters 1000 events, and their next seven best results.

These could be from the Monte Carlo Masters, ATP 500, ATP 250, or Challenger events. Qualifying for the ATP Finals was a bonus.

Now, only 18 events count. Rankings will only include the four Grand Slams, eight mandatory Masters events, and a player's six best results, plus the ATP Finals if they qualify.

Also, the top 30 players only need to play four ATP 500 events, instead of five.

Who's Affected in the Top 10?

This change took place recently, and seven players in the top 10 lost points. Their positions stayed the same this time, except for the players who are stated.

Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and Jack Draper were not affected.

Alexander Zverev lost 50 points, Novak Djokovic dropped 10, Felix Auger-Aliassime lost 55, Taylor Fritz dropped 50, Alex de Minaur lost 55, Lorenzo Musetti dropped 50, and Ben Shelton lost 10 points.

What About the Rest of the Rankings?

The top players are mostly okay, but the further down the rankings you go, the more change you'll see.

In the top 20, Jiri Lehecka is the only one impacted. He lost 10 points and fell to No. 18. Karen Khachanov moved up to 17th.

Luciano Darderi and Tallon Griekspoor switched places and are now ranked 25th and 26th. These were the only changes in the top 30.

Outside the top 30, there were bigger moves.

Jaume Munar jumped three spots to No. 33, and Corentin Moutet moved up to 34th. Brandon Nakashima and Stefanos Tsitsipas each fell two spots.

Now ranked 35th and 36th, Nakashima and Tsitsipas might have a harder time getting seeded for the Australian Open.

Pablo Carreno Busta dropped the most, falling from 89th to 93rd.

IMMEDIATE: SHOCKING DETAILS BEHIND CARLOS ALCARAZ-FERRERO SPLIT; WILL HE JOIN RIVAL JANNIK SINNER

World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz has shocked tennis by splitting with Juan Carlos Ferrero. Learn the real reason behind the breakup.

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Ferrero Confirms No Communication With Alcaraz Since Dec 17

Tennis fans were shocked when Carlos Alcaraz and his long-time coach, Juan Carlos Ferrero, split. Ferrero has now said whether they've talked since.

Even though Alcaraz is only 22, his time with Ferrero is one of tennis' best. The 2003 French Open champ started coaching Alcaraz, who was a young, promising player in 2019.

With Ferrero's help, Alcaraz became a superstar and one of the most exciting players to watch. He's won six Grand Slams and finished 2025 as the world's top player, ahead of Jannik Sinner.

The only major title they didn't win together was the Australian Open. Even though it's still a few weeks away, people recently saw Alcaraz's outfit for the 2026 tournament in Melbourne. It's bright and colourful.

Alcaraz had a great 2025, winning two more Grand Slams, so the split was even more surprising. It sounds like disagreements between Ferrero and others close to Alcaraz caused the change.

In an interview, Ferrero answered a question everyone's been asking: Have he and Alcaraz been in touch since they stopped working together?

We haven't talked yet because he needs to relax so he can train. Once things calm down, we'll talk, and everything will be fine.

Ferrero's nice words about Alcaraz suggest they'll talk again. He thinks they can still be friends after all they've achieved.

I've learned a lot from Carlos. He's a kid with amazing charisma. He's always loyal and honest, tells the truth, and works really hard. I'm happy because once things settle, I'm sure we'll keep talking, remembering all the things we did together, and stay friends.

It must be tough for Ferrero not to be coaching Alcaraz after working so hard to make him one of the best. Taking some time before talking to the 22-year-old might also be good for him.

Juan Carlos Ferrero was also asked about coaching Jannik Sinner after splitting from Carlos Alcaraz.

Since 2024, one of Ferrero's main jobs has been helping Alcaraz figure out how to beat Jannik Sinner. Together, they've won every men's singles Grand Slam in the last two seasons.

Now that Ferrero isn't Alcaraz's coach, he was asked if he'd consider joining Sinner's team, which would be a huge change in tennis.

Ferrero didn't say no. Instead, he said he needed time to get used to not coaching Alcaraz. Sinner is still coached by Simone Vagnozzi and Darren Cahill, after Cahill changed his mind about retiring at the end of 2025.

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