Sinner Storms Past Shelton, Sets Up Blockbuster Djokovic Semifinal

Jannik Sinner advanced to the Australian Open semifinals with a commanding straight-sets victory over Ben Shelton. The Italian dominated from the baseline, targeting Shelton's backhand and controlling the rallies throughout the match. This win sets up a highly anticipated semifinal clash against the tournament's record ten-time champion, Novak Djokovic. Sinner enters this marquee match with confidence, having previously beaten Djokovic in Grand Slam semifinals.

Key Points: Sinner Beats Shelton, Faces Djokovic in Aus Open Semis

  • Sinner wins 19th straight match at Melbourne Park
  • Sets up semifinal vs. 10-time champ Djokovic
  • Dominates Shelton 6-3, 6-4, 6-4
  • Extends head-to-head lead over Shelton to 9-1
2 min read

Aus Open: Sinner beats Shelton to book SF date with Djokovic

Jannik Sinner defeats Ben Shelton in straight sets to reach the Australian Open semifinals, where he will face Novak Djokovic. Full match analysis.

"Sinner has previously beaten Djokovic in the semi-finals at the Australian Open (2024), Roland Garros (2025), and Wimbledon (2025) - ATP reports"

Melbourne, Jan 28

World No. 2 Jannik Sinner strengthened his case for a third successive Australian Open title and made his way into the final four after defeating local favourite Ben Shelton 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 at Rod Laver Arena on Wednesday to extend his win streak to 19 matches at Melbourne Park.

The two-time defending champion extended his winning streak to nine consecutive victories and 22 straight sets against the formidable lefty, setting up Friday's semifinals match against Novak Djokovic.

In his ninth Grand Slam semi-final and third at the Australian Open, the four-time major champion faces a major challenge against record 10-time winner Novak Djokovic. Sinner has previously beaten Djokovic in the semi-finals at the Australian Open (2024), Roland Garros (2025), and Wimbledon (2025), ATP reports.

Shelton only lost one set en route to his third Australian Open quarter-final. However, like their previous matches, he found it difficult to play his best against the Italian.

Sinner targeted Shelton's backhand, pressured him on the forehand side, and controlled play from the baseline, improving his lead against the American to 9-1. They have now faced off four times in major tournaments, with Sinner winning all four, including twice in Australia and twice at Wimbledon.

Shelton's serve was less effective than he expected, while Sinner responded excellently in the first two sets. When they played baseline exchanges, it was usually the Italian who came out on top.

It was an evening filled with intrigue. Despite the lopsided score, from the end of the second set, four-time Grand Slam champion Sinner showed signs of physical vulnerability.

Sinner dominated the first set, ending with an 18-4 edge in winners to unforced errors, and carried this strength into the second. The pressure on Shelton increased as he struggled to find a consistent rhythm and faltered at key moments. He missed all three break points he had in the set and made 17 more unforced errors, letting Sinner extend his lead.

The No. 2 seed, who seemed to struggle physically towards the end of the second set, secured the decisive break in the ninth game of the third set when Shelton double-faulted at 15/40.

The 24-year-old seemed low on energy for a little while, which led to a slight dip in the quality and intensity of his tennis. However, the Italian regained his form, broke late in the third set and finished on serve to secure another straight-sets victory after two hours and 25 minutes.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Sinner vs Djokovic again! This is the rivalry tennis needs right now. Sinner has the mental edge having beaten him in their last few Slam meetings. But never count out the Joker on Rod Laver Arena. Friday can't come soon enough! 🎾
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Rohit P
Feel a bit for Shelton, he's a great talent but Sinner just has his number. 9-1 head-to-head is brutal. Sinner's baseline consistency is next level. Hope he has recovered fully from that physical dip mentioned in the article. Need him at 100% for Novak.
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Sarah B
Respectfully, while the article focuses on Sinner's dominance, I wish it gave a bit more analysis on *why* Shelton's serve wasn't effective. Was it Sinner's return position or Shelton's placement? The tactical breakdown feels a bit surface-level for a quarterfinal.
K
Karthik V
19 match win streak in Melbourne! That's some serious dominance on those courts. He's making a strong case to be the new King of Australia. If he gets past Djokovic, the title is surely his. My money's on Sinner in 4 sets.
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Michael C
The physical vulnerability point is interesting. Winning in straight sets while not at your absolute peak physically shows his champion mentality. He knows how to manage matches and energy. That's what separates the greats from the rest.

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