UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot
Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

7 April 2026

M25 J20 clockwise exit | Clockwise | Broken down vehicle

7 April 2026
Starmer risks Trump’s wrath as PM ‘refuses to allow US to use UK bases for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure’ – UK Times

Starmer risks Trump’s wrath as PM ‘refuses to allow US to use UK bases for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure’ – UK Times

7 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » Australian Open star Jannik Sinner could have been a Winter Olympics star instead
TV & Showbiz

Australian Open star Jannik Sinner could have been a Winter Olympics star instead

By uk-times.com8 February 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Australian Open star Jannik Sinner could have been a Winter Olympics star instead
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Jannik Sinner is known to the world as a four-time Grand Slam champion and one of tennis’ most ice-cool competitors, but there was a time when the Australian Open star looked destined for a very different Olympic stage.

Long before he was trading blows with Alex de Minaur, Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic in Melbourne, Sinner was carving through the slopes of northern Italy as one of the country’s brightest junior ski talents. 

Born in South Tyrol in the Dolomites, he grew up in Sexten, surrounded by snowfields where his parents worked at a ski resort. 

As the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics begin, a reminder that Jannik Sinner was destined to skiing greatness, beating the likes of Giovanni Franzoni (who leads the Italian Olympic team) as a kid…

Instead, he became a tennis champion, with four Slams (and counting) to his name 🦊 pic.twitter.com/lUxL8VJFIK

— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) February 7, 2026

By age seven, he had already claimed a Junior National Championship in giant slalom. At 11, he finished runner-up nationally.

Skiing was not just a hobby, it was his life. His childhood idol was American downhill great Bode Miller, not a tennis legend. 

Competing in a sport where one mistake can end everything, Sinner learned early that margins are brutal and unforgiving.

Before Grand Slam glory, Jannik Sinner dominated Italian junior skiing as a giant slalom prodigy

Raised in the Dolomites, Sinner grew up on snowfields while his parents worked at a ski resort

Raised in the Dolomites, Sinner grew up on snowfields while his parents worked at a ski resort

At seven, he won a national junior giant slalom title, marking him as Italy’s next alpine hope

At seven, he won a national junior giant slalom title, marking him as Italy’s next alpine hope

‘The reason why I chose tennis was, in tennis you can make mistakes. You can lose points, but you can still win the match. In skiing, if you make one mistake, one big mistake, you cannot win,’ Sinner told Vogue in 2024.

That high-stakes environment would later become the foundation of his mental edge on court. In skiing, there are no second chances mid-run. In tennis, there is always another point. That distinction ultimately changed his life.

At 13, Sinner made the defining decision to walk away from competitive skiing and move to Bordighera to pursue tennis full-time. 

It was a gamble. He admitted that while he had been ‘winning a lot’ in skiing, tennis initially brought far more losses as he adjusted physically and technically.

‘I was winning a lot when I was young in skiing, and in tennis I never won,’ he said. 

‘And then slowly I started to lose in skiing, because physically I was not ready to compete.’

The rest is history. Sinner rose to world No. 1, captured multiple major titles and established himself as the face of Italian men’s tennis.

Yet the Olympic dream never truly disappeared, it simply evolved.

Skiing’s unforgiving margins shaped the mental steel later seen in his Grand Slam triumphs

Skiing’s unforgiving margins shaped the mental steel later seen in his Grand Slam triumphs

Early tennis brought heavy defeats, a stark contrast to his winning skiing years. But the gamble paid off as Sinner rose to world number one.

Early tennis brought heavy defeats, a stark contrast to his winning skiing years. But the gamble paid off as Sinner rose to world number one.

In September 2024, he was named the first official volunteer for the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. 

True to his word, just days after reaching the semifinals of the 2026 Australian Open, he was spotted back in Italy checking train tickets alongside Paralympic fencing champion Bebe Vio.

‘I am proud to represent the passion for these extraordinary disciplines and the desire to contribute to the success of such a unique event,’ Sinner said at the time.

Sinner has since returned to his alpine roots in the public eye, starring in the Gucci Altitude winter sports collection ahead of the 2026 Milano Cortina Games in a campaign that drew directly on his childhood in the Dolomites. 

There was no need for a stunt double, with the Italian comfortably back on skis and reminding fans that the technical skill and balance forged in his early years have not disappeared.

Still, a serious return to competitive skiing is unrealistic given the ever-present injury risk and the demands of the professional tennis calendar. 

In another life, Sinner may have lined up at a Winter Olympics in giant slalom. 

Instead, he chose tennis, a sport that offers the chance to recover from mistakes and fight back point by point, a decision that has helped turn him into one of the most formidable stars of his generation.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

7 April 2026
The €100m man that Liverpool and Man United are battling over: How Yan Diomande went from amateur football to Bundesliga record-breaker and potential Mohamed Salah replacement in three years – and how he slipped through Rangers’ grasp

The €100m man that Liverpool and Man United are battling over: How Yan Diomande went from amateur football to Bundesliga record-breaker and potential Mohamed Salah replacement in three years – and how he slipped through Rangers’ grasp

7 April 2026
The Masters black market for GNOMES: Golf fans rush to buy limited edition .99 item – which resell for up to ,000 – with Augusta ‘set to end sales of figurines THIS YEAR’

The Masters black market for GNOMES: Golf fans rush to buy limited edition $49.99 item – which resell for up to $10,000 – with Augusta ‘set to end sales of figurines THIS YEAR’

7 April 2026
Courtney Lawes’ return is exactly the stroke of luck Steve Borthwick needed – but Owen Farrell offers a warning for England head coach

Courtney Lawes’ return is exactly the stroke of luck Steve Borthwick needed – but Owen Farrell offers a warning for England head coach

7 April 2026
Aussie cricket legend David Warner charged with drink driving after he was pulled over in Sydney’s east

Aussie cricket legend David Warner charged with drink driving after he was pulled over in Sydney’s east

7 April 2026
Joey Barton pleads not guilty to attacking man in golf club ‘assault’ that could leave victim blind in one eye

Joey Barton pleads not guilty to attacking man in golf club ‘assault’ that could leave victim blind in one eye

7 April 2026
Top News
Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’

7 April 2026

M25 J20 clockwise exit | Clockwise | Broken down vehicle

7 April 2026
Starmer risks Trump’s wrath as PM ‘refuses to allow US to use UK bases for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure’ – UK Times

Starmer risks Trump’s wrath as PM ‘refuses to allow US to use UK bases for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure’ – UK Times

7 April 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

Recent Posts

  • Paul Scholes names the EIGHT players Manchester United should sell this summer – including England international he calls a ‘great footballer’
  • M25 J20 clockwise exit | Clockwise | Broken down vehicle
  • Starmer risks Trump’s wrath as PM ‘refuses to allow US to use UK bases for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure’ – UK Times
  • M621 J2 westbound access | Westbound | Accident
  • Regulator finds no evidence that refugee charity engaged in inappropriate activity

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
© 2026 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version