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Jannik Sinner’s height is part of the story, but it is not the explanation. In this episode, Alvin and Torrey look at why Sinner has become such a difficult structural problem for the ATP: he combines elite movement, early ball-striking, return pressure, improved serving, and pattern discipline in a way that takes away an opponent’s preferred solutions.
The central tactical breakdown focuses on Alexander Zverev. Sinner does not simply overpower Zverev; he attacks the movement relationship between Zverev’s backhand, forehand recovery, and court position. Once Zverev is forced into defensive open-stance backhands, Sinner can go behind him, change line, drop, or move forward before Zverev ever gets back into his preferred rhythm.
The episode also looks ahead to Roland Garros and the profile of player who may eventually trouble Sinner: big enough to serve and hit through him, quick enough to move with him, and convicted enough to play first-strike tennis before Sinner starts solving the match. The final section turns to Hailey Baptiste’s Madrid win over Aryna Sabalenka, highlighting why Baptiste’s craft, touch, forehand shape, and clay-court comfort make the result more meaningful than a one-off upset.
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Rafael Jódar and the ATP’s Next Tactical Separator