
Sinner holds off Zverev to defend Wimbledon title
Sinner holds off Zverev to defend Wimbledon title Figure caption, Scintillating Sinner's best shots as world number one retains Wimbledon titleByJonathan Jurejko Sport tennis news reporter at WimbledonPublished12 July...
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Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: Sinner holds off Zverev to defend Wimbledon title Figure caption, Scintillating Sinner's best shots as world number one retains Wimbledon titleByJonathan Jurejko Sport tennis news reporter at WimbledonPublished12 July 2026, 20:05 BSTUpdated 2 minutes agoJannik Sinner demonstrated once again why he is the world's best player after holding off Alexander Zverev to win back-to-back Wimbledon men's singles titles. Italy's Sinner gradually took control of an extremely tight contest to win 6-7 (7-9) 7-6 (7-2) 6-3 6-4 at the All England Club. German second seed Zverev played confidently and boldly as he looked to back up his maiden Grand Slam victory at the French Open last month.
But it was still not enough to beat Sinner in an intense, high-quality encounter that gripped a star-studded Centre Court. "Jannik, I don't really like you any more," joked Zverev, who will move above the injured Carlos Alcaraz to second in the world rankings on Monday. "He showed once again why he is the best player in the world.
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"The Prince and Princess of Wales, along with Hollywood stars Nicole Kidman and Ben Stiller, watched on as Sinner worked his way through the match against a determined Zverev. Sinner's relief was clear as he threw himself to the floor in celebration after securing victory in three hours and 46 minutes - the second longest win of his career. Sinner - who has now won his past 10 matches against Zverev - is the 10th man to retain the Wimbledon men's trophy since the Open era began in 1968.
It is the fifth Grand Slam title of his career and his first of 2026. Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Jannik Sinner has won Wimbledon and the Australian Open twice, and the US Open onceSupreme Sinner recovers from Paris setbackAlongside generational rival Alcaraz, Sinner has dominated the men's game over the past few seasons, and most expected him to comfortably add to his Grand Slam tally this year. However, Sinner lost to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open semi-finals and then, having arrived at the French Open on a 29-match winning streak, surprisingly wilted in the second round at Roland Garros.
At Wimbledon, with Melbourne champion Alcaraz missing for the second successive major with a wrist injury, Sinner has reiterated why he is already a true great of the game. Coming through a gruelling fortnight - particularly in the hot conditions that have troubled him previously - is testament to the work Sinner has put in. After his shock loss in Paris, Sinner retreated from competitive action and did not play a tournament leading up to Wimbledon.
The decision to take a physical and mental break, as well as trying to find the cause of his problems in the heat, has paid off. Sinner showed a degree of vulnerability early in the tournament, needing five sets to creep past Serbia's Miomir Kecmanovic, but has grown in confidence and quality over the fortnight.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





