“Serving performance, it helped,” Jannik Sinner said with a half-smile after his 6-4, 6-4 win over Jiri Lehecka in the Miami Open final on Sunday.
Sinner knew there was a Captain Obvious quality to this statement. He hit 10 aces, won 92 percent of his first-serve points, and wasn’t broken. That tends to help.
Most important, perhaps, when he faced his one moment of danger, he didn’t need to do anything other than use his serve to get out of it. Up an early break in the first set, Sinner experienced a brief and unexpected lapse, going down 0-40. Then he calmly turned around and smacked five straight unreturnable serves—two aces and three service winners. Any thought that Sinner might succumb to final-round nerves, or stumble at the Sunshine Double finish line, was quickly dismissed.
Read more: Jannik Sinner becomes first tennis player ever to win Sunshine Double without losing a set
