TURIN, Italy — Olé, olé olé olé, Sinner, Sinner.
Olé, olé olé olé, Sinner, Sinner.
Jannik Sinner is trying to speak, but his own name is resounding too loudly across the Inalpi Arena in Turin. Lit up on billboards, written on placards, chanted across the aisles. Sinner, the first Italian to achieve the men’s world No. 1 ranking, isn’t just the featured attraction of the ATP Tour Finals tournament in his home country: He is the tournament, on the court and off it.
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There he is on billboards in the train station. There he is on banners hanging from light poles. There he is — well, not him, a character of
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