Tennis

Sinner Survives Five-Set Scare As Wimbledon Defence Opens On Edge

Jannik Sinner’s Wimbledon defence began with danger, pain and a five-set escape.

The defending champion recovered from two sets to one down to beat Miomir Kecmanovic 4-6, 6-3, 6-7(6), 6-2, 6-3, surviving both a stubborn opponent and a third-set fall that briefly threatened to turn his opening match into something far more serious.

This was not the controlled first-round start Sinner wanted.

Kecmanovic took the opening set, pushed the Italian into uncomfortable rallies and then edged the third-set tiebreak to move within one set of a major shock.

Miomir Kecmanovic lost to Jannik Sinner4-6, 6-3, 6-7(6), 6-2, 6-3,

Then came the moment that changed the mood.

Sinner slipped near the baseline in the third set and briefly clutched his left hip. On grass, that kind of fall carries immediate danger. One wrong landing can change a tournament. One hesitation after it can change a match.

Sinner avoided both.

He kept playing, kept moving and slowly dragged the contest back under his control.

Champion Finds The Answer

The match turned after the third set.

Down two sets to one, Sinner lifted his level, took the fourth set 6-2 and then controlled the decisive moments in the fifth. His movement looked steadier, his shot-making carried more authority and Kecmanovic’s window began to close.

According to the uploaded source, Sinner said he was lucky because things can go wrong quickly on grass. He also said it was important to keep trusting his movement after the fall.

That was the real test.

Grass rewards confidence. It punishes fear. Once a player starts moving carefully, everything slows down. The court becomes bigger. The rallies become heavier. The opponent begins to sense it.

Sinner could not afford that.

So he moved through the scare instead of playing around it.

Wimbledon Has Already Asked A Question

This was not a statement of dominance.

It was a statement of nerve.

That matters for a defending champion. Early Grand Slam danger can expose weakness, but it can also force a player to sharpen quickly. Sinner has already had to absorb scoreboard pressure, manage a physical scare and fight through a dangerous opponent before the tournament has properly opened.

The result keeps his title defence alive.

But it also leaves a warning.

Wimbledon will test him physically as much as technically. The grass can shift a match in one movement, and Sinner has already felt how thin the margin can be.

Borges Waits After The Escape

Sinner now moves into the second round, where he is set to face Portugal’s Nuno Borges.

That match arrives with a different pressure. The champion is through, but his opener showed how quickly comfort can disappear on grass.

Sinner avoided the upset.

He avoided the injury scare.

Now he has to turn survival into control.

Independent Digital News Network

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