Jannik Sinner is a perfectionist, and often enough manages to achieve that goal.
The way in which he hits a tennis ball is unlike anything the sport has ever seen before, and arguably, alongside Carlos Alcaraz, they are revolutionising tennis.
Their constant drive to improve and better one another is helping them reach new heights and unearth new techniques, leaving the rest of the chasing ATP Tour field in the dust.
And, Jannik Sinner’s pursuit of perfection was perfectly evidenced during last night’s Miami Open final.
Will Jannik Sinner complete the Career Grand Slam at Roland Garros this year? 🤔
If not, who do you think will win Roland Garros?
Despite beating Jiri Lehecka quite comfortably, Chris Eubanks actually picked up on a frustration from the former world number one.
However, it was not his opponent, or even the conditions that irritated Sinner. It was his own minor flaws.
Chris Eubanks noticed Jannik Sinner get irritated during Miami final
Speaking on Tennis Channel after the match, the American summed up Sinner’s desperation for perfection by pointing out: “What was super interesting, in the beginning, Sinner seemed to be irritated by his serve.”
However, unsurprisingly, it took very little for the four-time Grand Slam champion to turn things around, as Eubanks added: “He had a low first serve percentage in his first service game. He looked at his team.
“I don’t know what Darren Cahill or Simone Vagnozzi told him, but from that point on, it was just first serve, first serve, first serve, first serve, and the rest of his game followed. He was phenomenal in all areas.”
Jim Courier would then discuss Lehecka’s missed opportunities in the match, of which there were very few. He claimed: “Yeah, it was very much about that little sequence early in the match in the one-all when Sinner gets the break, and then there’s the potential for the boomerang break, down love-40, service percentage well under 50% at that point, and he delivers five consecutive first serves. And that would kind of be the story.
“Lehecka would have some other opportunities, some little windows in on the Sinner service games and Sinner just time and time again coming up with a big delivery to de-stress the situation, and that’s kind of become his calling card here in the last, basically since the US Open.”

Navratilova discussed one tactic that could trouble Sinner going forward as she delivered her post-match analysis, but what is most frightening is how the 24-year-old will learn from this event.
Despite winning back-to-back Masters 1000 events, his takeaway will be what needs improving rather than heralding this momentous feat.
When was the last time Jannik Sinner dropped a set at a Masters 1000 event?
Sinner’s dominance at the Masters 1000 level is not exclusive to 2026.
In fact, it extends way back into last year, given that he has not dropped a single set, winning all of his last 34 sets at this level.
That is a run that stretches back through both Sunshine events and the Paris Masters, with his surprise loss in Shanghai in October the last time he faltered.
Who do you think will retire with more Grand Slam titles?
There, he was forced to retire against Tallon Griekspoor after losing the second set.
Since then, he has enjoyed an unprecedented level of dominance, and it will be intriguing to see whether he can maintain that heading onto the clay courts.

