Triple championship point. Jannik Sinner, world No. 1, leads two sets to one, five games to three in the fourth set. Love-40.
The Italian stands just one point away from claiming his first Roland Garros title and fourth Grand Slam. And at home, we reach for the remote to turn off the TV, certain this match is about to end.
But the match was far from over. Although world No.2 Carlos Alcaraz faced triple championship point at 3-5 in the fourth set, he managed to pull off a legendary comeback. He saved all three match points before breaking Sinner in the 10th game. Riding that momentum, the Spaniard claimed the fourth set, leveling the match to two sets all.
In the fifth and final set, both players continued to hold firm, trading games at 6-6, until the world No.2 emerged victorious as he won the tie break 10-2. In doing so, he secured his second Roland Garros title and fifth Grand Slam, in a match that became the second-longest in the open era–a match that will go down in history as one of the greatest ever played.
While only one player could leave Paris the 2025 Roland Garros champion, the match effectively crowned both Sinner and Alcaraz as the sport’s ‘New Two,’ signaling the end of the ‘Big Three’ era: when Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal dominated men’s tennis, each winning a record-breaking 20+ Grand Slam titles and cementing their status among the greatest players in history.
Before this epic battle, we used to be casual tennis fans: US Open regulars every summer, and we’d check who won each Slam, but that was about it. Now? We’re glued to every match, placing friendly bets on who will win each Slam and in how many sets. And the reason for our newfound obsession is simple: this is likely the beginning of one of the greatest sports rivalries we’ll ever see–and Sinner’s only 24 and Alcaraz 22.
Somewhere along the way, we found ourselves on opposite sides of the rivalry, one of us firmly in the Sinner camp, the other an unapologetic Alcaraz loyalist. We’ve already turned every match between them into our own personal battle. But best of all, their summer showdown didn’t end in Paris.
Just five weeks later, Sinner and Alcaraz met again. Different surface, same stakes. This time, it was on Centre Court in mid-July, and tennis fans alike understood what this match meant. Alcaraz looked sharp early. He took the first set and settled into the rhythm of the court like he’d been there a hundred times before. But Sinner didn’t give him anything after that. He held serve, cleaned up his returns and started making Alcaraz work for every point. From the second set on, he didn’t face a single break point. Three straight sets, each ending 6-4, and just over three hours later, Sinner was the 2025 Wimbledon champion.
Alcaraz didn’t make a scene about it, unlike some other players when they lose. No frustration, no collapse. After the match, he handled it with the kind of honesty that is familiar. He admitted it was tough. Losing a Slam final for the first time would be. But he spoke about what he learned from it, how proud he was of the grass season and how much better he’s gotten at handling these moments. And the thing is, you believe him. He doesn’t say what he thinks people want to hear. He just says what’s true.
Alcaraz plays with a freedom that’s difficult to decipher without sounding over the top. It’s not overly flashy or dramatic. He just plays with complete trust in his abilities. There’s no hesitation. If the ball is returned, he runs for it. If he misses, he reacts and then moves on. When he’s focused, the energy shifts. You see it in the way the crowd leans in. You hear it in their cheers. It doesn’t feel like he’s thinking about his legacy, but just having fun playing the sport he loves.
The first time I saw him was against Stephano Tsitsipas (then World No. 3) at the 2021 US Open. He was just 18, ranked 55th in the world, still new to all of it, and that match was a mess in the best way possible. It was one of those rare matches that felt like the beginning of something unforgettable.
He dominated the first set 6-3 before the momentum swung hard Tsistpas’s way. Alcaraz lost the second set, and by the third, he was down 2-5, two breaks behind. Many would have given up, lost hope. But Alcaraz fought back to force a tiebreak, which he won 7-1. Then came the fourth set, where Tsitsipas completely dominated 6-0. Alcaraz in the fifth set, matching Tsitsipas’s energy and the match ended with an Alcaraz forehand winner that wouldn’t be forgotten.
That match wasn’t just a breakthrough win. It was an announcement. Watching Alcaraz there, mentally strong and fighting through each point, it wasn’t purely about talent but his refusal to quit. Ever since, he’s played like it matters. Like every point is worth the fight. He has consistently proven to be a player who can dig himself out of any ditch, no matter how deep.
Then there’s his smile. Not the polished kind you see in interviews. Just something that forms without him thinking about it. After a long rally. After a beautiful drop shot. Walking back to the baseline. Even when he loses a point! It’s not for the cameras. It’s instinctive and unfiltered. The kind that sneaks out when you love the game too much to hide it.
That day against Tsitsipas, it was everywhere. And when it ended with that earth-shattering forehand, you knew you’d remember it. Not just the shot, but the smile that followed.
As for Sinner? Well, he couldn’t be any more different than Alcaraz, and that’s part of what makes their rivalry so intriguing.
While Alcaraz is charming, expressive and enjoys fan interaction, with a tennis style full of flair, Sinner is quiet, reserved and laser-focused. His game is clean and consistent, and he often hides his emotions on the court. Many call him “ice cold.”
Yet to mistake his composure for being robotic is to miss the real Sinner. After his devastating loss in Paris, his emotions were written all over his face. At the post-match press conference, his eyes filled with tears, and during his speech, he still thanked his team, the ball kids and congratulated Alcaraz on “an amazing battle.”
This reaction is quintessential Sinner. Most players might have lost their cool after such a crushing defeat; while heartbroken, he stayed humble both in victory and loss. In an interview about what kind of champion he wants to be, the Italian summed it up simply: “I want to be just a humble person. I always remind myself where I’m from: I’m from a small house in a small village, with an amazing family, which I was very, very lucky to have and I still have. We are people who are very good in what we do, so we are automatically also the inspiration for younger people. But that’s it, we are not changing the world. So why change ourselves with success?”
While Sinner is usually not the fan favorite when facing Alcaraz, it’s hard not to admire the way he carries himself.
After a disappointing end to what should have been another incredible final in Cincinnati, we look forward to (hopefully) another Sincaraz matchup at the 2025 US Open.
