The Shock in Paris

The tennis world held its breath. Jannik Sinner, the undisputed king of the court, collapsed. Not from a lack of skill, but from the relentless heat of Roland Garros. The number one seed fell to Juan Manuel Cerundola in a stunning five-set thriller: 3-6, 2-6, 7-5, 6-1, 6-1. It was not just a loss; it was a physical breakdown under the Parisian sun.

Body Betrayed by Exhaustion

Sinner spoke plainly after the defeat. He tried to serve for the match in the fourth set but had no strength left. Severe dizziness struck. Dehydration and cramps ravaged his system. "I was struggling, strong dizziness started hitting me," he admitted. The Italian had played heavily in recent months with little recovery time. Waking up that morning, he felt drained. On a Grand Slam stage, one bad day can cost everything. Cerundola capitalized, playing a tough, resilient game when Sinner’s energy faded.

Eyes on Wimbledon

Now, the focus shifts to London. Sinner will skip grass-court prep events to rest completely. Wimbledon begins June 29. "I need time to recover mentally and physically," he said. Despite losing his main goal of Paris, Sinner enters Wimbledon with three clay titles already secured this season. The road to glory is long, but the Italian champion is already looking ahead. Rest comes first. Then, the battle for the grass begins.