Carlos Alcaraz, Cincinnati Masters
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The highly-anticipated final at the Cincinnati Open came to a sad ending on Monday, as World No. 1 Jannik Sinner was forced to retire from the match against No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz while trailing 5-0 due to illness. With the result, Alcaraz wins his third Masters 1000 title of the season and his eighth overall in his storied young career.
Iga Swiatek and Carlos Alcaraz underlined their hard court credentials ahead of the US Open with victories over Jasmine Paolini and Jannik Sinner respectively in the women's and men's singles tournaments at the Cincinnati Open.
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Tennis World USA on MSNFormer ATP ace comments on Jannik Sinner's retirement in Cincinnati
The Cincinnati Masters 1000 final between Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz was undoubtedly the most anticipated match in view of the US Open, scheduled in New York from August 24 to September 7, but it was a total disappointment.
Sinner turned 24 years old on Saturday, while Alcaraz is 22. All of this is to say it’s not a surprise that top-ranked Sinner and Alcaraz are meeting in the finals of the 2025 Cincinnati Masters, one of the biggest non-Grand Slams on the tennis calendar and the warmup event for the U.S. Open.
French qualifier Térence Atmane continued his spectacular run at the Cincinnati Masters on Friday with a straights sets dismissal of the seventh seed Holger Rune. The 23-year-old, who had to play three matches in the qualifying tournament to reach the 96-man main draw,
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FirstSportz on MSNAlejandro Davidovich Fokina Slams Cincinnati Masters After Jannik Sinner Retires in Final
It was Monday, the start of the work week for the majority of people. But still enthusiastic tennis fans flocked
Jannik Sinner has reached the final of the Cincinnati Masters for the second consecutive time. On Saturday (August 16), he knocked out Terence Atmane 7-6(4), 6-2 to book a spot in a final for the fifth time this season.