Audio By Carbonatix
Jannik Sinner said it was an "amazing feeling" to be back on court after beating Argentina’s Mariano Navone at the Italian Open in the first match since his doping ban.
The 6-3 6-4 victory was the world number one’s 22nd in a row - a streak interrupted by the three-month suspension he agreed to with the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada).
Sinner wrote ‘Che bello’ (How beautiful) on the camera lens at the end of the match, as chants of ‘Ole’ rang around the stadium.
The Italian said the reaction from the home crowd was the best he had ever experienced.
"It has been amazing to go again on court after such a long time, having great support also in the last days," Sinner said.
His parents were among 10,500 people who offered him a full-throated welcome onto the Campo Centrale, but Sinner showed little emotion as he walked on hand in hand with a child mascot.
"From the first day I came here, it has been amazing. I was waiting for this moment for quite a long time," he added.
"The whole match, even when it seems quite comfortable, it's a rollercoaster, no?
"Inside we feel that, especially the beginning of the match, having, again, the nerves of serving for the first time, trying to move in the best possible way you can."

Huge crowds tried to catch a glimpse of Sinner when he practised on Court Five earlier in the day. A TV camera was rolling throughout, while children balanced on parents' shoulders and others mounted a fire hydrant and a potted plant to get the best possible view.
"Jannik’s day" was the headline on Saturday’s edition of Italian daily newspaper Corriere dello Sport. "The wait is over. From 7pm Rome will embrace … the strongest Italian tennis player of all time," the paper continued.
Sinner signed a lot of autographs this week as he practised with top-10 players like Taylor Fritz and Casper Ruud.
He has been greeted with great warmth and excitement - as the overwhelming majority of Italian tennis fans seem to feel a three-month suspension was harsh and are treating his return as a celebration.
There was even a short burst of applause from members of the Italian media when Sinner took his seat in the interview room on Monday afternoon.
The match was Sinner’s first since he successfully defended his Australian Open title in Melbourne in January.
Three weeks later, he accepted Wada‘s offer of a three-month ban for two doping violations last year.
Sinner tested positive for clostebol and was originally cleared of any fault by an independent tribunal.
Even though Wada did not dispute that the steroid had entered his system because his physio had been using a spray containing clostebol to treat a cut on his own finger, it initially felt a ban of between one and two years would be appropriate.
Wada later came to the conclusion a suspension of that length would be "unduly harsh" and so entered into negotiations with Sinner’s legal team.
Rome reserved its best weather of the week for the 23-year-old’s return.
As Lazio played Juventus in the Olympic Stadium just a few hundred metres away, Sinner missed his very first serve, but quickly found his stride. He won the first set with a single break of serve and some clean, powerful ball striking.
But the second set was less straightforward as Sinner’s forehand proved increasingly unreliable. He recorded 16 unforced errors off that wing in the match, but by two breaks of serve to one, was still able to complete a straight-set win in one hour and 38 minutes.
His decision making was not as sharp as usual but Sinner had every reason to be delighted with his return.
"I was missing the feedback of official matches, which are the best feedbacks we players can get," Sinner said.
"At least now I have a bigger picture of what I'm doing well and what I have to improve.
"The nerves and everything, it has to go again into my body. It was a great start from my point of view of this tournament and of the comeback."
Sinner’s third-round match on Monday will be against the world number 93, Jesper de Jong - a lucky loser from qualifying.
The Italian Open is the last Masters 1000 event before the French Open, but Sinner has also entered the Hamburg Open in the week before Roland Garros in case he feels he needs more practice on the clay.
Latest Stories
-
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
14 minutes -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
27 minutes -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to Bolgatanga
31 minutes -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
32 minutes -
AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi mine donates fire tender to boost emergency response in municipality
33 minutes -
Gov’t introduces sliding-scale mining royalties to capture price gains
44 minutes -
Global Africa Summit Accra 2025 rallies investors, diaspora and policymakers to boost trade and growth
46 minutes -
New research suggests a better way to fight littering in Ghana
46 minutes -
We must protect our own – Adutwum spokesperson calls for Ashanti solidarity
1 hour -
FDA shuts down 7 Foreign shops in Kumasi over unapproved, foreign-labelled products
1 hour -
13 arrested as Central East Police crack down on crime in Senya Beraku enclave
1 hour -
Kumasi residents raise alarm over poor street lighting ahead of Christmas
2 hours -
Police swoop in Kintampo nabs 13 in drug bust, seizes cannabis and tramadol
2 hours -
Activist urges stronger border security, environmental protection, and accountability
2 hours -
Let’s be more intentional about our unity than they were about our division – Mahama to diaspora
2 hours
