Jannik Sinner downed defending champion Novak Djokovic 6-1, 6-2, 6-7 (6), 6-3 at the Australian Open on Friday to hand the top seed a first defeat at his Melbourne Park fortress in six years and power into his maiden Grand Slam final.
Sinner's masterclass in the opening two sets set the wheels in motion for Djokovic's only defeat in the semi-finals of his favourite major. The youngster also became the first Italian player to reach an Australian Open singles final.
"It was a very, very tough match," said Sinner, who did not face a single break point in the match.
"I started out very well, for two sets I felt that he was not feeling too good on court so I just tried to keep pushing and then in the third set I had match point and I missed the forehand, but you know, this is tennis.
"I just tried to be ready for the next set, which I started off really well, and of course the atmosphere was so great. It's so great to play here."
Fourth seed Sinner stunned Djokovic twice in three matches at the end of last season and he made a rollicking start on Rod Laver Arena by targeting his 36-year-old opponent's shaky serve and error-prone backhand to comfortably win the opening set.
Djokovic had not lost at his favourite stomping ground since the 2018 edition when he crashed to South Korean Chung Hyeon and there were worrying signs for the 10-times Melbourne champion as the 22-year-old Sinner eased through the next on a double break.
The Sinner tsunami showed no signs of subsiding in the third set but Djokovic raised his game to stay firm until the tiebreak where the Italian squandered a match point at 6-5 by hitting a forehand into the net to give his opponent a lifeline.
Djokovic claimed the next three points to pull a set back to draw loud cheers, but Sinner broke for a 3-1 lead in the fourth set and ran away with the match to snap the Serb's 33-match winning run at Melbourne Park and end his quest for a record 25th major.
"I was looking forward to this match, it's always nice to have this kind of player where you can learn from," Sinner said.
"I lost (to him) last year in the semis at Wimbledon, I learned a lot from that, and it's all part of the process."
Victory meant that Sinner has now defeated Djokovic at the ATP Finals, the Davis Cup and the Grand Slam stage.
"I don't know, ask him," Sinner said with a laugh when asked why his game was so difficult for Djokovic.
"We play similar and first of all you have to try and return as many balls as possible. He's such an incredible server, and I just try to guess sometimes, you know, trying to push, trying to move him around a little bit.
"I'm not going to give you the tactics because I hope I'm going to play him in a couple of different matches."
Sinner said he was riding the wave of confidence from last year and looked forward to Sunday's final, where he will play Daniil Medvedev.
"I have the belief that I can play the best players in the world. On Sunday, I'm in my first final. Let's see how it goes. But I'm really happy, I'll come here with a smile and I'll try my best."
"I will watch it (the next semi-final) for sure, I'm a huge tennis fan. I'm a bit more relaxed now. They're such incredible players and have played so many times. It's going to be really interesting."
Medvedev outlasts Zverev to book Sinner showdown in Melbourne final
Daniil Medvedev fought back from the brink to defeat Alexander Zverev 5-7, 3-6, 7-6(4), 7-6(5) 6-3 in a thrilling semi-final and reach the Australian Open title clash with the third seed gunning for his second Grand Slam trophy.
Having suffered heartbreak at Melbourne Park in back-to-back final defeats by Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal in 2021 and 2022, former U.S. Open champion Medvedev will hope to get third time lucky when he meets Italian youngster Jannik Sinner on Sunday.
Russian Medvedev positioned himself well behind the baseline to counter Zverev's booming serves and extend the rallies but he fired a series of early double faults to fall behind. He clawed his way back from two breaks down to draw level at 5-5.
Zverev struck again to move in front and raised his arms to huge applause after taking the first set with a superb backhand volley, having set up the opportunity by winning the previous point after an exhausting 51-shot rally.
The 26-year-old came into the net more and broke for a 3-2 lead in the second set which effectively helped him wrap it up, but Medvedev did not give up despite looking like he had just run a marathon and pinched the third set in a tiebreak.
Medvedev continued to push hard in a tense fourth set and the 27-year-old shrugged off a double fault in the tiebreak to level the contest, before breaking in the fifth game of the decider to lay the platform for his great escape.