In his 100th Grand Slam win, top-ranked Jannik Sinner successfully defended his Wimbledon tennis title.

The Italian overturned a one-set deficit against his German opponent Alexander Zverev to win a marathon match 6-7, 7-6, 6-3, 6-4, successfully defending his title and claiming his fifth Grand Slam trophy.

Sport newspaper highlighted key moments of the final. Zverev relied on a devastating serve, often exceeding 80% effectiveness on first serves, with an average speed over 200 km/h, turning every service game into a nightmare for Sinner, who missed his only chance in the first set before it was decided by a tiebreak, where a single error from the Italian on his serve was enough to tip the balance in his opponent's favor.

While Zverev's performance was convincing from the start, winning the first set gave him an extra boost to continue executing his plan, which featured more aggressive play than usual.

Serves continued to dominate the match, and the second set also went to a tiebreak. This time, however, Sinner found solutions on return, leveling the match and resetting the contest.

The pace slowed after two sets, each lasting over an hour. Sinner gained a huge morale boost from winning the second set and began to have more success on return.

Sinner came close to breaking his opponent's serve in the early games, but found himself under heavy pressure in the seventh game, where he saved a break point after Zverev slipped at an unfortunate moment.

Sinner survived that scare and then reaped the reward he had long awaited. After 34 games, the match saw its first break of serve, which was enough for the Italian to seal the third set and turn the match in his favor.

He repeated the same scenario in the fourth set, starting at a calm pace before raising the tempo once he spotted an opportunity, succeeding in securing the second and final break of the match, which gave him the advantage until the end, defeating Zverev and winning the title.