In an emotional and deeply personal interview, Siglinde Sinner, the mother of the world’s most beloved tennis champion, Jannik Sinner, broke down in tears as she spoke about the struggles, sacrifices, and silent battles that shaped her son’s path to glory. Her voice trembled with pride and pain as she recalled the years when Jannik fought through loneliness, criticism, and crushing expectations — long before the flashing cameras and roaring applause of the US Open 2024.
For the first time, the world heard from the woman who witnessed the making of a legend — not from the sidelines of a stadium, but from the quiet corners of a home in northern Italy, where dreams were born in silence and nurtured with unyielding love.
![Article] Relatable Parents: Sinner's mother can't cope after the first set today, leaves the stadium and goes for a walk riverside : r/tennis](https://preview.redd.it/article-relatable-parents-sinners-mother-cant-cope-after-v0-2uug2c5cn71f1.jpeg?auto=webp&s=f64729822f2bc64b8a16c9065ecfbb3224cbcff7)
Siglinde’s statement, “My son is the pride of the family and of Italy,” resonated like a national anthem of hope, echoing through the hearts of millions who see in Jannik not just a champion, but the spirit of perseverance itself.
The interview began with a question about Jannik’s mental strength. Siglinde paused, her eyes moist, and whispered, “You only see him lifting trophies. I’ve seen him when he couldn’t even lift his head.” Those words struck like lightning — the image of a young boy battling not his opponents, but his doubts.
Behind every triumph, there was struggle. She revealed that Jannik’s rise was not just about talent, but about pain — nights of exhaustion, moments of despair, and years when success seemed unreachable. “When he was twelve, he would come home crying because everyone said he was too cold, too quiet, too simple to become a champion. But I always told him: ‘Don’t change who you are. Your silence will speak one day.’”
That silence finally roared on the global stage of the US Open 2024, when Jannik Sinner lifted the trophy with trembling hands — not as a prodigy anymore, but as a symbol of Italy’s new golden generation. Yet, as Siglinde revealed, behind that victory was a journey marked by incredible sacrifice.
“There were years when he trained in the snow,” she recalled softly. “He would wake up at 5 a.m., go to the mountains, and practice for hours, even when his hands were bleeding. He never complained — he just smiled and said, ‘It’s okay, Mama. Every swing gets me closer to the dream.’”
The room fell silent as she continued. “There were times when we couldn’t afford to travel with him. He was alone in hotels, eating sandwiches and studying videos of his opponents. But he never asked for more. He just wanted a chance.”
Siglinde confessed that the hardest part was watching her son face the cruelty of fame. “People think success makes you happy. But sometimes, it makes you lonely. The higher he climbed, the more he had to hide his pain. He was criticized for being emotionless, for not showing excitement. But that’s how he protects himself — by keeping his heart safe.”
Her eyes filled with tears as she spoke of the US Open 2024 final — the moment Italy will never forget. “When he won, he didn’t shout. He didn’t throw the racket. He just looked up to the sky. I knew he was saying thank you — to his father, to me, and to every obstacle that made him stronger.”
But it wasn’t just about winning. Siglinde revealed that Jannik’s journey was also about rediscovering balance between glory and humanity. “After the final, he didn’t go to a party. He came home, hugged me, and said, ‘Mama, we did it.’ He didn’t say ‘I did it.’ That’s Jannik — he shares his victories with everyone.”
As she spoke, the world began to see Jannik Sinner not just as a champion, but as a son — a humble, grounded young man shaped by a family that taught him dignity above fame, kindness above victory.
When asked how she felt hearing Italy call her son “the new national treasure,” Siglinde smiled through her tears. “It’s beautiful. But before he belongs to Italy, he belongs to us — to his family, to the people who saw him fall and get back up again. The pride I feel is not just for his titles, but for the man he has become.”
Her words sparked a wave of emotion across the tennis community. Social media overflowed with messages of admiration and love. Fans from all over the world praised the Sinner family for their humility and strength.
Even fellow players reacted. Rafael Nadal commented, “This is what real greatness looks like — not just winning, but inspiring.” Carlos Alcaraz added, “I’ve played against Jannik many times, but now I understand the heart behind his game.”
The story also reignited a debate about how modern athletes are perceived. Many journalists pointed out how rare it is to see such honesty from a sports family — a reminder that behind every champion stands a world of untold sacrifices.
Siglinde concluded the interview with a reflection that brought everyone in the room to tears. “People see him holding trophies. I see him holding hope — not just for himself, but for everyone who dares to dream.”
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(999x0:1001x2)/jannik-sinner-2-4f8eda747c7b466393b2a85384a4b535.jpg)
As the camera turned off, she looked down at an old photograph on her lap — a little boy in a red jacket, holding a worn tennis racket twice his size. She smiled. “He told me once that tennis was just his way of saying thank you to life. Maybe that’s why he plays with so much heart.”
That evening, Italian television replayed the clip countless times, each repetition deepening the emotional impact. Across the country, families gathered around their screens, many crying quietly — because Siglinde’s words weren’t just about tennis. They were about love, sacrifice, and the silent, unbreakable bond between a mother and her son.
And somewhere in Turin, as he prepares for the next challenge, Jannik Sinner surely heard those words echoing in his heart:
“My son is the pride of the family and of Italy.”
Because beyond the trophies, beyond the victories, beyond the spotlight — that is the truest title he will ever hold.