
"I was very predictable today on court. He did many things, he changed up the game. That's also his style of how he plays. Now it's going to be on me if I want to make changes or not. That's definitely [what] we are going to work on. I'm trying to be more prepared for the next match that I will play against him."
"It also depends on how you arrive to play against Carlos. One thing is when the scoreline [or] matches before are comfortable but you always do the same things, like I did, for example, during this tournament, I didn't make one serve-volley, didn't use a lot of drop shots, and then you arrive to a point where you play against Carlos where you have to go out of the comfort zone."
Jannik Sinner plans to change his playing style, accept short-term losses, and experiment to become less predictable on court. He admitted he was very predictable and that Carlos Alcaraz repeatedly changed tactics during their match, forcing Sinner out of his comfort zone. Sinner said he will work on serve-and-volley plays, drop shots and other variations to be more prepared for future matches against Alcaraz. He noted comfortable lead-ups can encourage repetition of the same strategies, making adaptation necessary when facing a dynamic opponent. He framed potential short-term defeats as an acceptable trade-off for long-term development and increased unpredictability.
Read at 101GREATGOALS.COM
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