Sinner, Zverev, and the Serve-Return Gap at Wimbledon
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Jannik Sinner’s Wimbledon final win over Alexander Zverev was not a simple case of one player overwhelming the other. Zverev produced one of his most assertive performances of the season, playing higher in the court, committing more fully to his forehand, and attacking with clearer purpose than he has for much of the year.
The problem was what happened after that first wave. Sinner’s serve remained nearly untouchable, his return pressure slowly tightened around Zverev’s service games, and his baseline tempo forced Zverev to keep repeating a level that is still difficult for him to sustain. The match became less about whether Zverev had improved — he clearly had — and more about whether that improvement can survive against a player as complete and repeatable as Sinner.
Alvin and Torrey also discuss Andy Roddick’s commentary, the coaching challenge of returning against elite servers, and the broader question of whether the grass-court season deserves more room on the tennis calendar.
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