Tennis: Teenage Miami finalist Sinner blends tranquillity, talent to keep rising

Reuters

Published Apr 04, 2021 04:13AM ET

(Reuters) - Aged just 19, men's Miami Open tennis finalist Jannik Sinner already stands out on the ATP tour for a calm demeanour belying his youth - something his coach Riccardo Piatti puts down to the Italian's background as a junior ski champion.

In February, Sinner became the youngest man since Novak Djokovic in 2006 to win two ATP titles, and a win in his first ATP Masters 1000 final on Sunday against friend and occasional doubles partner Hubert Hurkacz would make him the youngest-ever Miami winner.

After his Miami quarter-final loss to Sinner, Alexander Bublik asked the Italian at the net if he was human, while former world No. 9 Roberto Bautista Agut also lauded Sinner for his mental strength after losing to him in the semi-final.

A former junior champion in giant slalom, Sinner switched his entire focus to tennis when he moved to coach Piatti's academy in Bordighera from San Candido as a 14-year-old. Sinner said this week he used to play tennis only twice a week before moving to Bordighera.

"If you ski or make some race, you understand immediately that you need to be concentrated and if you make a mistake, you are out," Piatti told the ATP Tour website http://www.atptour.com.

"He liked tennis because he can make a mistake and then immediately come back and play again. I saw that he was playing well, but what took my attention was outside the court.

"He was a 14-year-old kid, but he controlled the mind of a young man of 17, 18, 19 ... he was quite mature."

Sinner will jump to a career-best ranking of No. 14 if he wins the Miami title, but Piatti said Sinner's ambition was higher - claiming Grand Slams and the No. 1 ranking.

"(The final is) an important moment, but not the last moment. It's part of what he needs to do," Piatti said.