Sinner stays red hot with Vienna win over Opelka

Jannik Sinner
Getty Images

Jannik Sinner continued his charge toward a potential spot in the Nitto ATP Finals when he defeated Reilly Opelka 6-4, 6-2 in round one of the Erste Bank Open on Wednesday afternoon.

Sinner is making a quick turnaround after capturing the Antwerp title last week. Dating back to Antwerp, the 20-year-old Italian has won nine consecutive sets by scores no closer than 6-4, including seven of the nine by an exact 6-2 margin. Sinner’s hot streak has him within 75 points of Hubert Hurkacz in the live race for the eighth and final spot in the Nitto ATP Finals. Another victory on Thursday would move him to within 30 points of Hurkacz.

Cameron Norrie is just five points behind Sinner in 10th place. The Indian Wells champion will go up against Felix Auger-Aliassime in the Vienna second round on Thursday. Interestingly, Auger-Aliassime is right behind Norrie in 11th position but the Canadian needs a huge result in either Vienna and/or Paris because he is 500 points back of the Brit.

Denis Shapovalov was in Turin contention after reaching the Wimbledon semifinals, but a dreadful summer and fall slump has him out of the picture. The Canadian at least managed to win his first match at the St. Petersburg Open on Wednesday, beating Pablo Andujar 2-6, 6-3, 6-0.

“Definitely very tough to play Pablo [in my first match] of a tournament,” Shapovalov said. “He’s a great player. It was a tough start to the match; I didn’t feel so great, but I just told myself to keep going. Obviously there was a lot of tennis to play, so [I] wanted to really turn it around in the second set and I did a really good job.”

St. Petersburg’s No. 2 seed awaits either Alexander Bublik or Jan-Lennard Struff in the quarterfinals.

181
Who will win Vienna?

89
Who will win St. Petersburg?

6 Comments on Sinner stays red hot with Vienna win over Opelka

  1. Djokovic just clinging onto the #1 ranking. Makes this Paris Masters more interesting than it’s ever been.

    Can Sinner keep the momentum going or was that the end of his streak? I’ve never seen the rakings move around so much in a single year. I wonder if that is a first…

  2. There are scenarios in which Djokovic can clinch a record-breaking seventh year-end No. 1 finish in Paris:

    Djokovic wins Paris title (regardless of Medvedev’s Paris finish)
    Djokovic reaches Paris final + Medvedev does not win Paris title
    Djokovic reaches Paris SF + Medvedev does not reach Paris final
    Djokovic reaches Paris QF + Medvedev does not reach Paris SF
    Djokovic reaches Paris 3R + Medvedev does not reach Paris SF
    Medvedev does not reach Paris QF (regardless of Djokovic’s Paris finish)

    Source: ATPTour.com

    • The ATP got this wrong. Looks like Djokovic holds onto #1 spot by simply making the final even if Medvedev wins it.

      Makes sense; Medvedev is won it last year and is defending a lot of points.

  3. I reckon Djokovic is tired mentally and many of the tour are playing like they have nothing lose.

    I’ll call it now; he won’t win.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.




Skip to toolbar