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Nadal on Alcaraz and Sinner: contrasting styles ahead of the US Open final

Nadal contrasts Sinner’s forehand rhythm with Alcaraz’s unpredictability ahead of US Open. in 2025US

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Rafael Nadal offered a detailed read of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner’s games as they prepare to meet in the 2025 US Open final. Their rivalry has produced a run of finals between the pair and this will be their fifth consecutive meeting in a final at tournaments they entered.

The recent sequence of results underlines the closeness of the matchup. Alcaraz beat Sinner in straight sets in the Rome Masters final, then recovered from two sets down to win the French Open in five sets, saving three championship points in the process. Sinner answered with a four-set victory over Alcaraz in the Wimbledon final. Alcaraz later claimed the Cincinnati Masters title after Sinner retired with illness in the opening set of that final.

In an interview with The Athletic, Nadal broke down the differences between the two players and what makes their matches compelling:

“He (Sinner) puts a rhythm on the forehand that is very difficult to follow,” assessed Nadal , who won 22 Grand Slam titles. “He’s very quick on picking the ball early and he’s quick on the transition from defending to attacking.

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“Carlos is more magic, he’s more unpredictable, he can play at a level that probably sometimes Jannik cannot. But at the same time, he’s making more mistakes, too – he can play better, but he can play worse, and it’s about finding the balance.

“Carlos has all the shots, sometimes he’s making mistakes, but he’s going for the shots and it’s more amazing to see because, at the end, it’s more unexpected and unpredictable.

“I like it, it’s very funny to see Carlos play because he’s able to produce amazing things and at the same time, he’s able to have mistakes, and that’s human.

“From my point of view, Carlos can improve a little bit [on] the tactical way to approach some matches. Sometimes it feels like he always plays for every big shot, and sometimes, he doesn’t need that much.

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“That’s why I’m interested in how they evolve, because I think both of them have room to improve, and they are so good.”

Nadal also reflected on the French Open final between the two:

“The match was unbelievable because it was super emotional at the end,” Nadal said.

“For me, the first three sets were not that high-quality tennis. It was a normal final. Then, fourth and fifth sets were a high-quality fight.

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“That’s from my point of view, talking about if I had to play against them. The fourth and fifth sets were super, super high-level tennis, emotional, had a little bit of everything. Before, for me, I think Carlos didn’t play at his level. From my perspective, I think he was a little bit wrong tactically.

“Jannik, of course, he was unlucky up 0-40, but when he had the chance to go for it, I think he was not playing with the right determination.

“I think he stopped doing what he was doing good — going for the shots and playing with this extra speed on the ball at the moment that he had to take advantage. He didn’t play as aggressive as he was doing before.

“But overall, if we put the full picture, the final was unforgettable. It was amazing. The end of the match was one of the most emotional that I saw and I was lucky to see that as a fan from home.”

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Analytics & Stats ATP US Open

Alcaraz Becomes Youngest Man to Claim Multiple Slams on All Three Surfaces

Alcaraz, 22, became the youngest man to win multiple majors on all three surfaces after US Open 2025

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Carlos Alcaraz added a consequential line to his career record at the US Open, defeating Jannik Sinner 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 to capture the title and reach a new landmark. At 22, Alcaraz is now the youngest man in history to win multiple Grand Slam titles on hard courts, clay and grass.

The Spaniard’s resume now includes two Wimbledon trophies on grass (2023 and 2024), two Roland Garros titles on clay (2024 and 2025) and two US Open victories on hard courts (2022 and 2025). With his Roland Garros triumph last year as a 21-year-old, he became the youngest man to win Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces. The US Open win takes that achievement a step further: he is the youngest to have multiple majors on each surface.

Alcaraz joins an exclusive group as only the fourth man to finish with multiple Grand Slam titles on every surface, following Mats Wilander, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. The comparison underlines the breadth of his success across different conditions and formats.

Historical context highlights how surfaces have evolved in the sport. The US Open switched to hard courts beginning in 1978, and the Australian Open moved to hard courts in 1988. Those shifts help explain how modern players build diversified major records across surfaces.

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The final at the US Open also marked another milestone in Alcaraz’s tally of majors. He won his first Grand Slam title on hard courts and, with this victory, has now won his sixth major on hard courts as well. Alcaraz won the first and now the sixth Grand Slam title of his career on hard courts, at the US Open.

His victory over Sinner closed another chapter in a rapid run of major success and underscored how quickly Alcaraz has moved from promising talent to a player whose achievements are already being measured alongside some of the game’s all-time greats.

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Analytics & Stats ATP US Open

Alcaraz and Sinner set to clear $50m career mark with US Open final payday

US Open winner will pass $50m in career prize money as Alcaraz and Sinner meet in New York final….

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Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner arrive at the US Open final with more than a title at stake. Beyond the Grand Slam crown, the winner will vault past the $50m career prize-money mark and become only the sixth player in history to do so.

Prize money on the ATP Tour has climbed rapidly in recent years, and the US Open has led the increases this season. The tournament has boosted payouts across the board: the men’s and women’s singles runner-up prizes rose by 39% and beaten finalists are scheduled to receive $2.5m. The champion’s cheque of roughly $5m will push either Alcaraz or Sinner over the $50m threshold.

That potential milestone comes as the two highest-ranked players on the men’s side continue a dominant run. Between them they have claimed the last seven Grand Slam singles titles. The current leaders on the all-time prize-money list remain Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, with Andy Murray in fourth, but Alcaraz and Sinner are closing in fast.

Alcaraz has been candid about his priorities. “I love playing tennis. You know, most of the time I don’t think about the money,” said Alcaraz.

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“I just play for love or for fun. But you have to be realistic. You have to think that you want to earn money, you know, and that’s it.

“The money in Saudi Arabia is the most, highest prize money ever in history, so that was a good motivation, at least for me.”

Off-court, Alcaraz’s earnings are supplemented by a string of long-standing sponsors including Nike, Rolex, BMW, Babolat, Calvin Klein, Evian and Louis Vuitton. Sinner also benefits from lucrative agreements with Nike, Gucci, Rolex, Lavazza and Head. The draft notes that Sinner served a three-month ban earlier this year after a positive drug test; his commercial deals were not affected.

Whoever lifts the trophy in New York will move up the historical earnings rankings and underline how rapidly prize-money benchmarks are changing in men’s tennis.

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All-time prize money winners

1. Novak Djokovic, $188,934,053

2. Rafael Nadal $134,946,100

3. Roger Federer $130,594

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4. Andy Murray $64,687,542

5. Alexander Zverev $54,455,659

6. Carlos Alcaraz $48,486,628

7. Daniil Medvedev $46,936,309

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8. Jannik Sinner $46,279,987

9. Pete Sampras $43,280,489

10. Stan Wawrinka $37,634,708

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Analytics & Stats ATP US Open

Sinner and Alcaraz Renew Rivalry in US Open Final with No 1 at Stake

Sinner and Alcaraz meet in the US Open final; the match decides this season’s world No 1. on Sunday.

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The US Open final brings the matchup many expected before the tournament began: Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz meeting for Grand Slam honours. It is the third consecutive major final between the two this season and the first time in the Open Era that the same pair have contested three major finals in a single season. The winner will extend an eight-event stretch in which every Grand Slam has been won by either Sinner or Alcaraz, leaving them three tournaments short of the Federer-Nadal duopoly record.

Beyond the title, the match is a straight shootout for the world No 1 ranking. Sinner, the defending champion, bids to become the first man since Roger Federer in 2008 to defend the US Open. Alcaraz aims to reclaim the trophy he first won in 2022.

Twelve months earlier their US Open fortunes were sharply different. Defying the then-emerging controversy of his failed drug tests from earlier in 2024, world No 1 Sinner stormed to his second major title and his first US Open, collecting 2,000 ranking points. Alcaraz, fresh from winning Wimbledon and the French Open that summer, was stunned in the second round by Botic van de Zandschulp and earned 50 points.

Alcaraz closed the gap on Sinner’s lead at the ATP 1000 event this summer, lifting the title after the Italian retired with illness in the final. That result moved Alcaraz to within 2,000 points of Sinner heading into the US Open and gave him a clear path back to No 1.

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Accounting for points to defend from 2024, Alcaraz’s official total of 9,590 fell only to 9,550 once round-one points were guaranteed, while Sinner’s official 11,480 dropped to a live total of 9,490 after removing 1,990. A Sinner victory would leave him on 11,480 with Alcaraz on 10,840. An Alcaraz win would flip the positions: Alcaraz to 11,540 and Sinner to 10,780.

Sinner first reached No 1 in June 2024, replacing Novak Djokovic, and has not relinquished the spot since, accumulating 65 weeks at the top. Alcaraz has spent 36 weeks as world No 1, across four separate spells, and has not held the ranking since September 2023.

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