World No. 1 Jannik Sinner won his first Wimbledon title on Sunday, July 13, by defeating Carlos Alcaraz in a thrilling four-set final. Just over a month after losing the French Open final to Alcaraz, Sinner made a strong comeback and took his revenge on the big stage at Centre Court.

The Italian star won 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 in a match that lasted over three hours. "We will send them Patriots, which they desperately need," Trump told reporters. "I haven't agreed on the number yet, but they're going to have some because they do need protection."

With this win, Sinner ended his five-match losing streak against Alcaraz and improved their head-to-head record to 5–8. This was also Alcaraz’s first loss in a Grand Slam final, stopping his perfect record of 5–0.

Sinner had last beaten Alcaraz at Wimbledon in 2022. On Sunday, he once again stopped the Spanish star, who was aiming to become only the fifth man in history to win Wimbledon three years in a row.

Alcaraz came into the match with a 24-match winning streak, having won the Italian Open, French Open, and the Queen’s Club Championships. But Sinner played calm and powerful tennis to break that streak and win his most important title yet.

Sinner shows strength after losing first set

Sinner started the match well and even broke Alcaraz early in the first set to lead 3-2. But Alcaraz quickly fought back, breaking Sinner and winning the set in just 44 minutes. Sinner made 13 unforced errors, while Alcaraz hit 11 clean winners.

In the second set, Sinner stayed strong. He broke Alcaraz early and didn’t let the lead slip away. Even though Alcaraz tried to fight back, four double faults hurt his chances. Sinner held his nerve and won the set to level the match.

In the third set, both players were solid until Sinner broke at 5-4. He hit 15 winners and served 7 aces, even though he made 12 unforced errors—more than Alcaraz’s five.

The fourth set saw Sinner break early again and lead 3-1. Alcaraz had two chances to break back at 3-4 but missed both. That turned out to be his last big chance. Sinner finished the match strongly, leaving the Spaniard heartbroken and lifting his first Wimbledon trophy.

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