JANNIK SINNER produced the comeback of his life to win the Australian Open for the first time and give marathon man Daniil Medvedev nightmares for the rest of his days.
The red-haired Italian came from two sets down to win his maiden major championship, prevailing 3-6 3-6 6-4 6-4 6-3 in a lung-busting, sinew-sapping contest lasting three hours and 44 minutes.
GettyJannik Sinner completed an astonishing comeback to beat Daniil Medvedev[/caption]
AFPThe Italian fell to the floor after winning the championship point[/caption]
GettyMedvedev went two sets up but failed to take the all-important third[/caption]
The Carota Boys – six childhood friends from Italy who watch Sinner’s matches around the world dressed up as carrots – went ballistic as the 22-year-old became the third Italian man to become a singles Slam champion.
His name will be written in the history books alongside Nicola Pietrangeli, who won back-to-back Roland Garros titles in 1959-60, and Adriano Panatta, was successful on Parisian clay in 1976.
As he snatched victory from the jaws of defeat, Sinner fell to the floor in relief and then saluted the crowd before embracing those his friends, family and coaching staff.
Sympathy was a natural emotion to feel towards Medvedev, 27, who had done so much to get to this stage and yet once again was denied the chance to take home the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup.
Over the course of the past fortnight, Medvedev had been on court for a FULL DAY – more than 24 hours spent with a racquet in his hand in competition.
Nobody had spent more time in action than the 27-year-old and his tally of 31 sets in the same single event is a record for the Open era.
This is the Russian’s third defeat in a final on the Rod Laver Arena and echoed the Miracle of Melbourne in 2022 when Rafa Nadal overturned a two-set deficit.
To illustrate the pain and toil he was enduring, Medvedev required medical treatment for tape dressing on his right foot after just three games into the fourth set.
CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERS
And he threatened to change his shorts on court in front of millions watching on TV just before the fifth set.
The umpire refused his request but he defied those orders and went backstage quickly with a tournament official in attendance.
In the end, he was given a warning for not being ready to serve for the opening game of the decider.