Jannik Sinner Powers Past Ben Shelton At Nitto ATP Finals
Watching Jannik Sinner play tennis right now is like watching a master chef in the kitchen. Everything is precise, everything has a purpose, and the final result is just a thing of beauty. His latest masterpiece? A clinical dismantling of American hopeful Ben Shelton at the ATP Finals in Turin. The scoreboard read 6-3, 7-6(3), but it felt more like a lesson in dominance.
Shelton came out swinging. You could see the game plan: be aggressive, rush the net, and try to throw the Italian off his rhythm. It’s a solid plan against most players. The problem is, Sinner isn’t like most players. He’s playing on a different planet right now.
Sinner’s Flawless Victory Lap
This match was essentially a victory lap for Sinner, who had already punched his ticket to the semifinals. But did he take his foot off the gas? Absolutely not. That’s not in his DNA. Instead, he treated the home crowd to a display of why he’s the man to beat. He completed the entire group stage without dropping a single set or even getting his serve broken. Let that sink in. It’s the kind of statistic that makes other players check their racket strings for defects.
Sinner’s serve was a weapon of mass destruction. He fired off 11 aces and faced only one break point the entire match, which he promptly saved with the nonchalance of someone brushing a piece of lint off their shoulder. Shelton, on the other hand, admitted he just got “out-served.” It was like bringing a knife to a gunfight, and Sinner was wielding a bazooka.
Shelton’s Reality Check
For Shelton, this tournament was an eye-opener. He went 0-3 against the best in the world and walked away knowing he has work to do. “I’m not the player that I want to be yet. Not close,” he said. That kind of honesty is refreshing, but it also highlights the gap between the top guys and everyone else. Shelton has the power and the swagger, but Sinner has the polish and the ice-cold nerve.
The second set was tighter, with Shelton saving a match point to force a tiebreak. For a fleeting moment, it looked like we might get a third set. But Sinner slammed the door shut, cruising through the tiebreak 7-3. It was a perfect ending to a perfect group stage for the Italian.
Now, Sinner sets his sights on Alex de Minaur in the semifinals. Riding an eight-match winning streak, he’s not just playing tennis; he’s making a statement. And the message is loud and clear: this is his house, and he has no intention of letting anyone else move in.
