Jannik Sinner beats Hubert Hurkacz to win first title on grass at Halle Open | Jessica Pegula wins Berlin Open | Tennis News

Jannik Sinner beats Hubert Hurkacz to win first title on grass at Halle Open | Jessica Pegula wins Berlin Open | Tennis News


Italy’s Jannik Sinner won his first grasscourt title by edging his doubles partner Hubert Hurkacz 7-6 7-6 in the Halle Open final on Sunday.

The win marks the 22-year-old Australian Open champion’s 14th singles career title.

Neither player could break serve and both sets went to tiebreaks in which top seed Sinner prevailed against the fifth-seeded Pole.

The first of those tiebreaks unusually stretched to 10-8 in Sinner’s favour, with the second seeing the Italian clinch the match via a more straightforward 7-2 tiebreak success.

The top seed had a chance to go 2-0 up in the second set but Hurkacz saved two break points as both players again held their serves before Sinner claimed the title.

“It’s inspiring what you’ve been doing the last 12 months,” Hurkacz told Sinner. “Jannik becoming number one in the world is really special. I try to learn from that. Big congrats.”

Sinner also congratulated fifth seed Hurkacz, who won the Halle Open in 2022, for reaching another final.

“We’re very good friends off court…seeing us play the final here is very special. Thank you so much,” he said.

World No 1 Sinner is preparing for Wimbledon, where he reached the semi-finals last year. The Grand Slam tournament starts on July 1.

Image:
Poland’s Hurkacz has to settle for the runner-up prize after a very tight two sets

Berlin Open: Pegula knocks out Gauff in semis, beats Kalinskaya in final

Jessica Pegula knocked out top seed and fellow American Coco Gauff 7-5 7-6 in a rain-interrupted semi-final clash and went on to beat Anna Kalinskaya 6-7 6-4 7-6 in the final to win the Berlin Open on Sunday.

Jessica Pegula wins the Berlin Open after beating Anna Kalinskaya, claiming her first title since last October

The semi-final was suspended on Saturday due to rain, with world no 5 Pegula leading 7-5 6-6(3-1). She wasted no time after the match resumed under a cloudy sky on Sunday, winning four of the last five points to reach the final.

Pegula lost a competitive first set to Russian Kalinskaya after both players broke the other three times each. But the American bounced back, breaking in the very first game to set up a win in the second set.

Pegula, 30, broke Kalinskaya to take a 3-1 lead in the third set, but the Russian 25-year-old fought back with a break of her own and saved four break points in the next game to make it 4-4.

Kalinskaya was on the verge of two more breaks that would have taken her to victory but the American saved five match points to win both games and take the set into tiebreaker, where she ultimately prevailed.

The win marked Pegula’s fifth career singles title and the first on grass, days before she competes in the Wimbledon where she reached the quarter-finals last year.

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‘Keep reeling in medals!’ Keely Hodgkinson inspired by Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis-Hill | Olympics News Sky, Sports, Olympics, Tokyo, Bolt, Athletics, Team GB, Great Britain, England, Events, News

‘Keep reeling in medals!’ Keely Hodgkinson inspired by Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis-Hill | Olympics News Sky, Sports, Olympics, Tokyo, Bolt, Athletics, Team GB, Great Britain, England, Events, News



Geraint Hughes

Sky Sports News

Sky Sports got to know Keely Hodgkinson as she prepares for the brutal 800m event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games; She opens up on how she was inspired by the likes of Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis-Hill

Last Updated: 06/06/24 8:47am

Favourite Olympics memory? Biggest inspiration? Get to know Olympic and World silver medallist Keely Hodgkinson as she prepares for Paris 2024 this summer

Favourite Olympics memory? Biggest inspiration? Get to know Olympic and World silver medallist Keely Hodgkinson as she prepares for Paris 2024 this summer

Favourite Olympics memory? Biggest inspiration? Get to know Olympic and World silver medallist Keely Hodgkinson as she prepares for Paris 2024 this summer

The Olympic women’s 800m Final is shaping up to be one of, if not the most competitive, dramatic, emotional races of Paris 2024.

Why? Because the runners involved that could contest gold, silver and bronze have been tussling in races with one another since the last Olympics and Team GB’s Keely Hodgkinson is in the mix, along with the USA’s Athing Mu and Kenya’s Mary Moraa.

Don’t rule out another Brit in Jemma Reekie, who came fourth in the Tokyo Final.

Hodgkinson though has stardust to sprinkle over two laps of the track. As a 19-year at the Tokyo Games in 2021 she took silver – what a way to announce herself to the World.

Hodgkinson believes her 800m rivalry with Athing Mu and Mary Moraa is 'great' for the sport and wants to show that she can come out on top against them at the Olympics

Hodgkinson believes her 800m rivalry with Athing Mu and Mary Moraa is ‘great’ for the sport and wants to show that she can come out on top against them at the Olympics

Hodgkinson believes her 800m rivalry with Athing Mu and Mary Moraa is ‘great’ for the sport and wants to show that she can come out on top against them at the Olympics

She keeps lowering her personal best and currently stands at 10th fastest on the all-time list at 1 minute 55.19 seconds.

Now 22, she’s fast and way more experienced. Where Tokyo was a blur where her adrenalin went stratospheric after her silver and she barely slept for days, now she views 800m as a job. One she is very good at.

Key to her success are her coaches. A husband and wife team who treat Keely as if she were one of their own. Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, who herself was a seriously good 800m runner taking bronze at the World Championships in 2009, push Hodgkinson to and beyond the pain barrier, but then make the hard training days fun.

Hodgkinson says she wants to turn her silver medal from Tokyo into gold in Paris and will be ‘fearless’ in her approach as she looks to make it happen

Hodgkinson says she wants to turn her silver medal from Tokyo into gold in Paris and will be ‘fearless’ in her approach as she looks to make it happen

Hodgkinson says she wants to turn her silver medal from Tokyo into gold in Paris and will be ‘fearless’ in her approach as she looks to make it happen

Hodgkinson told Sky Sports: “I just really gelled with Jenny and Trevor when I first met them when I was like 15, so I knew them way before I joined their setup.

“And I just think, like Trevor’s probably said before, his focus is ‘a happy athlete is a fast athlete’, so I just try and create that environment. But I think we have a really good relationship in that he knows when he’s annoying me and he knows when I’m not in the mood for his dad jokes!”

Watching them training in Manchester, you see and hear the relationship. It is ‘back and forth’ with humour, but there’s an instant switch when the serious hard work has to be done: “Looking at Mo Farah and Jess Ennis, it’s like ‘how do they do it every year over and over again?’ And I look back now and think ‘oh you have done it now for a good couple of years’, but it’s just keeping that going and I think it’s the one thing I’d like to do, to just keep reeling in the medals.”

And ‘reeling in the medals’ is what she has done. At European level so far it’s been gold. Add to that two World Championship silver medals and the silver from the Tokyo Olympics: “So far I’ve medalled at every championships I’ve ever been to which is quite hard to do… unfortunately I’ve been second every time!”

Hodgkinson tells the story of how she became 95 per cent deaf in one ear during her early teens following an operation to have a tumour removed

Hodgkinson tells the story of how she became 95 per cent deaf in one ear during her early teens following an operation to have a tumour removed

Hodgkinson tells the story of how she became 95 per cent deaf in one ear during her early teens following an operation to have a tumour removed

The next step is to get ahead of an American and a Kenyan: “I’ll probably say it’s in the mind, really. I think there’s a big difference between racing for a medal and racing for a gold medal, because if you watch back loads of races where people have gone for gold, they’ve ended up 4th, 5th, 6th because they’ve messed it up.

“So now I’m at a point where I’m like ‘right, well how do we get that gold?’ I think every year I’ve got closer and I’m in better shape as the seasons gone, so hopefully that all comes together in a few weeks and I’ll be better than I was before – so that’s a great position to be going into Paris.

“But I do actually think it’s all in the mind – the tiny split seconds that you make you really just need to believe and run a bit fearless, because if you don’t risk it you won’t get the rewards.”

Coaches Painter and Meadows know they have a special athlete and have invested lots of time – so much so that the first word from their now three-year-old daughter Arabella was something that sounded very much like “Keely or eeely!”

Hodgkinson tells the story behind each of her tattoos and the importance of expressing herself in different ways away from the track

Hodgkinson tells the story behind each of her tattoos and the importance of expressing herself in different ways away from the track

Hodgkinson tells the story behind each of her tattoos and the importance of expressing herself in different ways away from the track

As Meadows put it: “She is prepared to hurt herself. It takes bravery to start a session knowing you’re going to end up like that (on the floor). It’s a real killer event.”

‘A killer event’ is not a bad way to describe the 800m – at the highest level, the athletes on the start line effectively sprint two laps of a track! Hodgkinson intends not to be fazed: “When people think about the day of an Olympic final it can be very stressful. You know ‘oh god, I’ve worked this entire year for two minutes to get it right’

“But I think one of my pros is I look forward to it so much that I don’t even think about getting it wrong. So I’ll sit down and say to myself ‘well, I’ve raced these girls a million times’, and I almost don’t think about it being this big Olympic final.

“It’s just two laps of a track that I’ve done many, many times.”

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