London: World No. 1 Jannik Sinner successfully defended his Wimbledon crown after defeating Germany’s Alexander Zverev in a gripping four-set final, adding a fifth Grand Slam title to his growing list of achievements.
The 24-year-old Italian recovered from losing a tense opening-set tiebreak to seal a 6-7 (7-9), 7-6 (7-2), 6-3, 6-4 victory in three hours and 46 minutes on Centre Court.
The match was evenly balanced through the opening two sets, with both players serving strongly and refusing to give away opportunities. Zverev edged the first-set tiebreak before Sinner responded in style, taking the second-set tiebreak to level the contest.
Winning here marks greatness. Defence leaves no doubt.
Jannik Sinner is the 2026 Gentlemen’s Singles Champion. #Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/q6nsk2PYiK
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 12, 2026
From there, the momentum shifted firmly in Sinner’s favor. He raised his intensity, dictated the rallies, and claimed the third and fourth sets to retain the Wimbledon title.
Both finalists entered the championship match in excellent form after impressive campaigns, but Sinner once again delivered his best tennis when it mattered most.
After lifting the trophy, Sinner praised Zverev’s performance and expressed confidence that the German would soon become a Grand Slam champion.
“I would like to start with you and your whole team and family. You reached one of your main goals in winning a Grand Slam and made it happen in Paris. Today was so, so close, and if you play like this, I am very, very sure you are going to have this one at home as well. Amazing. Keep going,” Sinner said during the trophy presentation.
We did it again 🏆 Thank you all for the love and support ❤️❤️❤️ pic.twitter.com/UbSBUca5hi
— Jannik Sinner (@janniksin) July 12, 2026
The victory added several milestones to Sinner’s career. He became only the 10th man in the Open Era to successfully defend the Wimbledon men’s singles title. He also recorded his 100th Grand Slam match win at the age of 24 years and 330 days, becoming one of the eight youngest players to reach the landmark.
The triumph also marked Sinner’s 17th major title across Grand Slams, ATP Finals, Masters 1000 events, and the Olympic Games.
Apart from the trophy, Sinner received the winner’s prize of £3.6 million (around ₹46.09 crore) from Wimbledon 2026’s record total prize fund of £64.2 million (approximately ₹821 crore). Runner-up Zverev earned £1.85 million (about ₹23.7 crore) for his impressive run to the final.







