Carlos Moya, his career and the Slams won with Nadal: who is Sinner's possible new super-coach

Carlos Moya will be Jannik Sinner 's new super-coach next season, replacing Darren Cahill who has announced his intention to retire at the end of the year. This was revealed by journalist Sofya Tartakova, from the Russian portal Bolshe , who in recent weeks had already anticipated Marat Safin as Andrej Rublev's new coach and Jasmine Paolini 's decision to rely on Marc Lopez instead of Renzo Furlan .
Moya number 1 for two weeksSinner would have followed the advice of his former coach Riccardo Piatti who a month ago suggested he take him into consideration as a former no. 1 and a great person on a human level, just like Cahill. Moya was at the top of the world rankings for only two weeks, in March 1999, after the final at the Masters 1000 in Indian Wells. In his career he won a Slam (Roland Garros 1998), 3 Masters 1000 (Monte Carlo, Rome and Cincinnati), plus 15 other tournaments. He was also a finalist at the Australian Open 1997.
Rafa Nadal and Carlos Moya
Retired in 2010 at 34, he began coaching in 2016 by joining the technical staff of Canadian Milos Raonic , who he helped climb from 14th to 3rd place, reaching the final at Wimbledon. In December 2017 he became the coach of his friend Rafa Nadal, taking over from his uncle Toni. With him until the end of his career (2024), the Majorcan won 4 Roland Garros (2018, 2019, 2020, 2022), an Australian Open (2019), a US Open (2019) and 16 other tournaments.
What Moya could bring againFrom a technical point of view, Moya, who will always be supported by Vagnozzi , could certainly expand the Alto Adige player's technical knowledge, especially on clay, a surface that has always been the Spaniard's favorite. It is likely that he will encourage him to use rotations more consistently, to try to open up the court even more and make the most of his deadly accelerations, and to optimize the solutions with the forehand coming out.
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