NEW YORK—“He’s like an AI-generated player,” Alexander Bublik said of his opponent, Jannik Sinner, as he did his pre-match interview with ESPN inside Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Had Bublik seen his own future? Can he speak things into being? Sinner soon proved that his words weren’t all that much of an exaggeration. Over the next 81 minutes, the top seed and ATP No. 1 played with a borderline-inhuman blend of force and precision.
The onslaught began in the opening game. Bublik came into the match having held serve 55 straight times; just returning the ball had been an achievement for his opponents. The 28-year-old had won two titles and 11 straight matches since Wimbledon, and he had beaten Sinner in their last meeting, in June. Two nights earlier, he had knocked out No. 14 seed Tommy Paul on this court.
If that had Bublik riding high with confidence, Sinner took it all away in the blink of an eye. Bublik made six first serves in the opening game, and Sinner returned them all. By the time he was down break point, Bublik already looked rattled. When he double faulted, his run of service holds came to an immediate end.