NEW YORK—A week that began with sky-high hopes and expectations in U.S. tennis trenches ended on a sobering note on Sunday in Arthur Ashe Stadium, as the first American to contest a US Open final since Andy Roddick in 2006, 26-year-old Taylor Fritz, was soundly beaten by 23-year-old Jannik Sinner.
The match was a brisk affair, settled in two hours and 51 minutes. The 6-3, 6-4, 7-5 score reflected the way Fritz, a relatively slow starter throughout the fortnight, was getting more acclimated and working through the unfamiliar landscape of his first Grand Slam final—as well as Sinner’s seamless game.
Unfortunately for Fritz, Grand Slam tennis is best-of-five sets, not seven or more.
But even more time might not have made a difference to the outcome. Fritz was eclipsed in virtually all departments by Sinner, most notably in break-point conversion, with Sinner making good on 6 of 12 while Fritz captured just two of seven. The most telling statistic: Fritz won just five of 43 points returning Sinner’s serve (12 percent) while the winner claimed 17 of 53 for 32 percent.