Alcaraz is sinking sinners to win second US Open title

Carlos Alcaraz produced an elegant performance for Dethrone Jannik Sinner and recycling the world’s No. 1 ranking and captured his second American open crown with a 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory in Sunday’s final.

In their third straight Grand Slam title match, and the fifth final in 2025, the Spaniard beat the latest script, worn out and beat his rival to win a seventh victory in their last eight meetings.

For two hours and 42 minutes at Arthur Ashe, Alcaraz showed his complete Arsenal: took the ball early, mixed aggression with variety, landed his much improved serving and refused to give when the sinner threatened to turn speed.

While Sinner briefly stable in the second set, using his brand -based exchanges when he broke into love, the world no 1 looked flat on serving and could not maintain his rhythm.

From there, Alcaraz never loosened his grip and produced first strike tennis that dropped the Italian firepower, and the statistics told the story: Alcaraz beat 41 winners to Sinner’s 21, met only one breaking point and only lost nine points on the first service.

Day fifteen in an overview

  • Master: Carlos Alcaraz wins his second US Open title and sixth career sludge.
  • Scoreline: Alcaraz d. Sinner, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.
  • Inputs: Spanish recycles world # 1 from Sinner.
  • Turning point: Third Set Blitz: Alcaraz met 11 winners for Sinner’s 1.
  • Serving edge: Alcaraz won 83% of the first serving points, in front of just a breaking point all matches.
  • Streak broken: Sinner’s 27-match Slam Hard Court Win Streak snapped.

USA Open 2025 final result

US Open SemifinalUS Open Semifinal
Winner Loser Results line
Carlos Alcaraz (2) Jannik Sinner (2) 6-2 3-6 6-1 6-4

Carlos Alcaraz Def. Jannik Sinner 6-2 3-6 6-1 6-4

Alcaraz US OpenAlcaraz US Open

Carlos Alcaraz made Jannik Sinner to claim his second American open title and recover the world no. 1 ATP ranking with a leading 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory on Sunday afternoon at Flushing Meadows.

The 22-year-old Spaniard, in his third Grand Slam final in a row against Sinner, the Italian 42 winners switched to 21 and only nine points on the first serving (83%, 45/54) ​​on a two-hour, 42-minute collision.

Sinner was the game favorite with a 60% implied probability, but Alcaraz came out and shot and produced a mixture of relentless aggression and tactical versatility and took the ball early on return to Rush Sinner’s Baseline game from the opening game.

In the first set, he broke twice and used the Sinner’s nine unmatched errors (against Alcaraz’s four) with blowing forehands an average of 80 km / h.

His early return disturbed the sinner’s rhythm and forced rushed ground stretches and a 6-2 route in 35 minutes.

Sinner, on a 27-match hard court’s large profit streak, fought back in the second set and found texture with deeper ground stocks and breaks for love at 3-2, utilizes Alcaraz’s short dip in focus (12 unthreated errors).

The Spanjolen’s first dropped set of the tournament triggered a violent response in the third, where he released 11 winners to Sinner’s One, broke twice with Pinpoint Backhand pass and a drip shot-loyal combination.

The fourth set was a fatigue war, with Alcaraz’s 75% first serving win (20/29) and a crucial interruption at 3-3 sealed with a winner of crosscourt advance proving decisive.

Carlos has now won several Grand Slam titles on each surface: clay (2), grass (2) and hard courts (2), and he is well on the way to double figures.

Today I thought he was superior to the superior player, and Sinner’s Bollbashing couldn’t find a way through him.

At Wimbledon, he was burned several times by the sinner shot by the big cross winners when the ball just set up in the strike zone, but today he first delivered tennis to prevent it from happening.

Carlos also surpassed sinners, with the Italian landing only 48% of the first serving (a chink in his armor?), And he had better things in almost all areas.

If you can give yourself some respiratory room on serving (only 1 breaking point before), you have that twist room to get into the return game (11 break points created)

Alcaraz now has his seventh victory in 8 games against Sinner, with 6 of them in the final, and he is the new rightful number one.

Was this a classic? Not really, because the sets were leaning in the points, but these are some of the best tennis that I have seen Alcaraz produce for the whole match.

If only the TV crew could focus on it rather than having to pan in a “celebrity” in the audience every 30 seconds to calm their tiktok-brained viewers. IQ -shreds things.

Match statistics

Jannik Sinner Carlos Alcaraz
Winner 21 41
Unwavering errors 28 24
Ace 2 10
Double error 4 0
1st Earn % 48% (54/112) 61% (54/89)
1st serving points won 69% (37/54) 81% (45/54)
2nd serving points won 48% (28/58) 59% (20/34)
Break Points saved 55% (6/11) 0% (0/1)
Service Games 71% (12/17) 94% (16/17)
1st return score won 17% (9/54) 31% (17/54)
2nd return points won 43% (15/35) 52% (30/58)
Break Points won 100% (1/1) 45% (5/11)
Return games 6% (1/17) 29% (5/17)
Pressure points 58% (7/12) 42% (5/12)
Service points 58% (65/112) 73% (65/89)
Return points 27% (24/89) 42% (47/112)
Net points 73% (19/26) 74% (20/27)
Total score 44% (89/201) 56% (112/201)
Match points saved 2 0
Max points in line 8 7
Total games 38% (13/34) 62% (21/34)
Max -game in line 3 5

Highlights

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