Carlos Alcaraz produced a classy performance to dethrone Jannik Sinner and reclaim the World No. 1 ranking, capturing his second US Open crown with a 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory in Sunday’s final.
In their third straight Grand Slam title match, and fifth final of 2025, the Spaniard flipped the recent script, out-serving and out-hitting his rival to earn a seventh win in their last eight encounters.
For two hours and 42 minutes on Arthur Ashe, Alcaraz showcased his complete arsenal: taking the ball early, mixing aggression with variety, landing his much-improved serve and refusing to yield when Sinner threatened to turn the momentum.
While Sinner briefly steadied in the second set, utilising his trademark baseline exchanges when breaking to love, the World No. 1 looked flat on serve and couldn’t sustain his rhythm.
From there, Alcaraz never loosened his grip, producing first-strike tennis that blunted the Italian’s firepower, and the stats told the story: Alcaraz struck 41 winners to Sinner’s 21, faced just one break point, and dropped only nine points on first serve.
Day Fifteen at a Glance
- Champion: Carlos Alcaraz wins his second US Open title and sixth career Slam.
- Scoreline: Alcaraz d. Sinner, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.
- Stakes: Spaniard reclaims World No. 1 from Sinner.
- Turning Point: Third set blitz: Alcaraz hit 11 winners to Sinner’s 1.
- Serving Edge: Alcaraz won 83% of first-serve points, facing just 1 break point all match.
- Streak Broken: Sinner’s 27-match Slam hard-court win streak snapped.
US Open 2025 Final Result


| Winner | Loser | Scoreline |
|---|---|---|
| Carlos Alcaraz (2) | Jannik Sinner (2) | 6-2 3-6 6-1 6-4 |
Carlos Alcaraz def. Jannik Sinner 6-2 3-6 6-1 6-4


Carlos Alcaraz dethroned Jannik Sinner to claim his second US Open title and reclaim the World No. 1 ATP Ranking with a commanding 6-2, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory on Sunday afternoon at Flushing Meadows.
The 22-year-old Spaniard, in his third consecutive Grand Slam final against Sinner, outhit the Italian 42 winners to 21 and dropped just nine points on first serve (83%,45/54) in a two-hour, 42-minute clash.
Sinner was the betting favourite with a 60% implied probability, but Alcaraz came out firing, producing a blend of relentless aggression and tactical versatility, taking the ball early on returns to rush Sinner’s baseline game from the opening game.
In the first set, he broke twice, exploiting Sinner’s nine unforced errors (vs. Alcaraz’s four) with blistering forehands averaging 80 mph.
His early returns disrupted Sinner’s rhythm, forcing rushed groundstrokes and a 6-2 rout in 35 minutes.
Sinner, on a 27-match hard-court major win streak, fought back in the second set, finding consistency with deeper groundstrokes and breaking to love at 3-2, capitalising on Alcaraz’s brief dip in focus (12 unforced errors).
The Spaniard’s first dropped set of the tournament sparked a ferocious response in the third, where he unleashed 11 winners to Sinner’s one, breaking twice with pinpoint backhand passes and a drop shot-lob combination.
The fourth set was a war of attrition, with Alcaraz’s 75% first-serve point win rate (20/29) and a crucial break at 3-3 sealed with a crosscourt forehand winner proving decisive.
Carlos has now won multiple Grand Slam titles on each surface: clay (2), grass (2) and hard courts (2), and he’s well on the way to double figures.
Today, I thought he was by far the superior player, and Sinner’s ball-bashing wasn’t able to find a way through him.
At Wimbledon, he got burned several times by Sinner firing off those big cross winners whenever the ball just sat up in the strike zone, but today, he delivered first-strike tennis to stop that from happening.
Carlos also outserved Sinner, with the Italian landing just 48% of first serves (a chink in his armour?), and he had the better of things in pretty much all areas.
If you can give yourself some breathing room on serve (only 1 break point faced), then you have that wiggle room to get into return games (11 break points created)
Alcaraz now has his 7th win in 8 matches against Sinner, with 6 of them being in finals, and he’s the new rightful number one.
Was this one a classic? Not really, as the sets were lopsided in the score, but it’s some of the best tennis I’ve seen Alcaraz produce for the entirety of a match.
If only the TV crew could focus on that rather than needing to pan onto a “celebrity” in the crowd every 30 seconds to appease their TikTok-brained viewers. IQ shredding stuff.
Match Stats
| Jannik Sinner | Carlos Alcaraz | |
|---|---|---|
| Winners | 21 | 41 |
| Unforced Errors | 28 | 24 |
| Aces | 2 | 10 |
| Double Faults | 4 | 0 |
| 1st Serve % | 48% (54/112) | 61% (54/89) |
| 1st Serve Points Won | 69% (37/54) | 81% (45/54) |
| 2nd Serve Points Won | 48% (28/58) | 59% (20/34) |
| Break Points Saved | 55% (6/11) | 0% (0/1) |
| Service Games | 71% (12/17) | 94% (16/17) |
| 1st Return Points Won | 17% (9/54) | 31% (17/54) |
| 2nd Return Points Won | 43% (15/35) | 52% (30/58) |
| Break Points Won | 100% (1/1) | 45% (5/11) |
| Return Games | 6% (1/17) | 29% (5/17) |
| Pressure Points | 58% (7/12) | 42% (5/12) |
| Service Points | 58% (65/112) | 73% (65/89) |
| Return Points | 27% (24/89) | 42% (47/112) |
| Net Points | 73% (19/26) | 74% (20/27) |
| Total Points | 44% (89/201) | 56% (112/201) |
| Match Points Saved | 2 | 0 |
| Max Points In A Row | 8 | 7 |
| Total Games | 38% (13/34) | 62% (21/34) |
| Max Games In A Row | 3 | 5 |
Highlights
What did you think of the final? Let me know in the comments


