Sinner, 19, beats Brooksby, 20, to reach final in Washington

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jannik Sinner arrived at the Citi Open on a four-match losing streak. Now the 19-year-old from Italy is one victory from becoming the tournament’s youngest champion since 2008.

The fifth-seeded Sinner reached his fourth ATP final and stopped the run of 20-year-old Californian Jenson Brooksby by beating him 7-6 (2), 6-1 on Saturday at the hard-court tune-up for the U.S. Open.

“He’s fairly strong mentally. He makes good decisions,” Brooskby said about Sinner. “He does a lot of things right.”

Sinner was the only seeded player to reach the semifinals in Washington. The last teen to win the event was Juan Martin del Potro in 2008, a year before he won his only Grand Slam title in New York.

“I think tennis needs some new guys,” Sinner said earlier in the week.

On Sunday, he will face American Mackie McDonald, who has never been this far at a tour-level event.

On Saturday, Brooksby moved to the verge of grabbing the opener, holding three set points when he was up 6-5 and got to love-40 while Sinner served.

But right there is where Brooksby faltered for really the first time all week, suddenly deserted by the backhands and drop shots that have been been the bedrock of his success during a breakthrough season in which he raised his ranking from outside the top 300 to 130th.

“He’s a very tricky player,” Sinner said before the matchup.

On the brink of relinquishing the set, Sinner grabbed the next five points to hold for 6-all — or, more accurately, Brooksby frittered away the next five points.

A backhand return landed wide. A sliced backhand found the net. A backhand return of an 89 mph second serve landed long. A forehand sailed long to close a 12-stroke exchange. Another backhand return of a second serve, this one at 90 mph, missed the mark. Just like that, Brooksby’s best chance to seize control slipped away.

“I thought I was going to take it, but I think I probably got a little softer, just made a couple worse decisions,” Brooksby said. “I also had a letdown, mostly physically, I think, and also mentally. Kudos to him, but I’ll have to learn from that one.”

In the ensuing tiebreaker, Sinner was by far better. Brooksby’s mistakes continued to mount.

The American tried a drop shot that Sinner got to and tapped over the net for a winner to begin things. The set — the first one Brooksby lost in five matches — concluded with a drop shot into the net.

The denouement perhaps reflected the gulf in experience that favors the younger of the two. Brooksby had appeared in a total of nine ATP matches before Monday, 80 fewer than Sinner, who already has been to the French Open quarterfinals last year and fourth round this year — losing to Rafael Nadal each time.

In the second set, Sinner never faced a break point and went ahead 3-1 when another drop shot by Brooksby wasn’t as effective as he would have liked, eventually leading to a game-ending overhead winner. That was pretty much that.

“I know what I did wrong and did not come away with it, and also the letdown after that,” Brooksby said about the key stretch late in the first set and early in the second. “I’ll definitely learn from that the most and be more comfortable with those situations as it goes on.”

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