Tennis-Sinner says he is well prepared for Wimbledon heatwave


Jul 5, 2026; London, United Kingdom; Jannik Sinner (ITA) hits a backhand against Shintaro Mochizuki (JPN) (not pictured) on day seven of The Championships Wimbledon 2026 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) - ⁠Jannik Sinner has struggled in searing heat in the previous two Grand Slams ⁠this year, but the Italian said he was well prepared to handle ‌it in southwest London, with temperatures expected to soar at Wimbledon this week.

After a heatwave last week, which broke British records for June at around 37 degrees Celsius (98 degrees Fahrenheit), the second week of the ​tournament is forecast to see temperatures climb again beyond ⁠30 degrees Celsius.

Sinner, who hails ⁠from the Alpine region of South Tyrol in northern Italy, struggled physically during a Paris ⁠heatwave ‌to fall in the second round of the French Open in May and suffered cramps in an early scare at the Australian Open in January.

The ⁠four-times major winner will take on German Jan-Lennard Struff in ​the quarter-finals but did ‌not get drawn into a debate with reporters on when he will take ⁠to the court.

"It ​seems you know the schedule better than me. I don't know when they put me on. I'm happy either way. I'm well prepared. We did a good preparation," Sinner said after ⁠his 6-3 7-6(0) 6-3 win over Japanese qualifier Shintaro ​Mochizuki.

"Whatever happened in the past, it's gone already. Now we'll see if we found a solution. If not, we keep working for the next one. But in any case, the ⁠quarter-final of a Grand Slam, the feelings are different.

"There's definitely more tension. At the same time, I'm very happy where I am at the moment. We'll see how it goes."

Sinner said it was most important to have the right attitude on court in ​the business stage of the Grand Slam.

"Of course, the stages ⁠are getting bigger, more important, as we know," he added.

"There's more attention on every ​detail. We try to prepare for each match as ‌if it's the most important one and we'll ​see.

"I'm trying to control whatever we can, then the rest is trying to solve the problem."

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in London; editing by Clare Fallon)

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