He looks so doneđđđ more than usual
Jannik Sinner x Williams Race Strategist!Reader
Part 1 - Williams newest racing strategist is shaking up the F1 world, and also... Jannik Sinner's?
Part 2 - Reader and Sinner keep dancing around their obvious attraction and feelings. And even when they're over that slow burn, it still takes time and some champagne for them to really move their relationship along.
Can be read as a two part story btw!! The rest spins off their established relationship
---
Part 3 - What couple doesn't fight? This one does, for sure. But like, they're sweet about it. They love each other, but also reader is sad. But did I say they love each other? Because they love each other.
Part 4 - Reader and Sinner have high stake events on the same weekend, on other sides of the world. Oh, whatever will the dear pair do?? How will they cope? Aw, they're so stressed for each other.
*updated 2/20/25
More accompanying ficlets to come!! I want to build off their relationship more in the future, so stay tuned xx
something's off...
oh it's my trousers
WHOREMEMBERS
helpppppp the way he just sits there
THEY DID NOT LMAOOOO
Jannik Sinner x Tennis Player!Reader
Summary: You're WTA World No.1. He's ATP World No.1. Everyone assumes you'd hate each other; too competitive, too intense. And you did. At first. Until you were both stuck doing mixed-doubles promo for a sponsor in Rome. Until you got paired for a charity match. Until you accidentally won⊠and didnât stop texting afterward.
a/n: i recently rewatched challengers today because i couldn't practice tennis today.. i got inspired. atleast i got something good out of a sprained ankle, i hope you guys like it! (im cooked i got a tournament next week)
You barely look at him as you step onto the court, eyes locked on the lines, the crowd murmuring qnd cheering in anticipation. Itâs hard to ignore the tension in the air, everyoneâs been waiting for this match. You and Jannik Sinner, the World No. 1 ATP, and the World No. 1 WTA, forced to team up for a mixed doubles charity event in Italy. How ironic is that?
The Nike kits cling to you both in a matching, almost absurdly coordinated way. You can feel his presence beside you. Sharp, composed, intense; but you refuse to give him the satisfaction of meeting his gaze. This is all for the sponsors, nothing more. You arenât friends. Not now, not ever.
Heâs the last person youâd choose to be paired with. Youâve fought on the court against him on practices, never yielding an inch. You know how competitive he is, how he thrives in the heat of rivalry. And yet, here you are, standing shoulder to shoulder, forced to play as a team against Aryna Sabalenka and Ben Shelton. The moment the ball is served, youâre both in motion, racing across the court with sharp precision, silently competing to outdo one another. Your hands brush as you both reach for the same shot. Your heart skips, your breath hitches, but you donât acknowledge it. Not yet.
The crowd cheers as you win the first point, and you catch a glimpse of Jannik out of the corner of your eye. He smirks at you, just barely. You hate that smirk, that confidence. Itâs too much like your own. You give him a half-hearted nod. "Nice shot," you mutter. He doesnât respond, but his eyes linger on you a second too long, the unspoken challenge hanging in the air. Thereâs more between you now than just competition. A strange, undeniable chemistry. You try to shake it off, but the match is far from over, and neither of you is ready to stop playing.
You donât expect it, that effortless rhythm. Itâs like youâve trained together for years, not met awkwardly thirty minutes before warm-up. Every crosscourt shot you angle, heâs already there, anticipating it like clockwork. You find yourself moving in sync with him, not because he tells you to, but because your body just knows. At one point, you catch his eye after a clean volley, and he gives you the smallest nod, that same unreadable expression he wears when heâs locked in during finals. It should be infuriating. Instead, it sparks something warm, something dangerous.
The crowd starts getting louder, caught up in the surprising electricity of your teamwork. You donât even notice the scoreboard ticking upward, too focused on the way Jannik moves; fluid, precise, like a language your body suddenly understands. Arynaâs grin sharpens when she realizes you and Jannik are actually a threat, while Ben just shakes his head, laughing under his breath after another brutal rally. Still, no words pass between you and Jannik. Just glances. Just breathless seconds between points where you could swear heâs about to say something, but doesnât. And maybe thatâs safer. Because if either of you speaks, youâre not sure youâll keep pretending this is just tennis.
A series of volleys, and backhands go by in a blur. You both won straight sets, now it's the final set. And the final point. And it's your turn to serve.
You bounce the ball, you toss it. And the ball leaves your racket with a clean, vicious snap. You know itâs good the moment it cuts through the air. Fast, flat, brutal. It kisses the service line, untouched. Ben doesnât even move.
Silence, just for a beat. Then the umpireâs voice cuts through the tension:
âGame, Sinner andââ
Your name, sharp and clear.
The crowd erupts.
Jannik doesnât say anything. He just looks at you, really looks at you. Hus chest rising with the effort of the match, sweat clinging to his hairline. Then, in that quiet, charged pause before your teammates approach, before the photos, before the sponsor reps swarm in with cameras and high-fives, he reaches out. Not for a hug, not for show. Just a brief touch to your back. Warm. Grounding. The kind of thing youâre not supposed to feel anything from.
But you do. And judging by the way his fingers hesitate before falling away, so does he.
And for a second, you swear you could see his boyish smile, barely there, just enough to catch the light before he wipes it off, turning it into a quick flick of his towel against his forehead. But you saw it. Just for a moment.
You smirk at the thought, the coolness of his touch still lingering on your skin, even as you pat his back lightly. Your hand lingers a second too long, just enough for the feeling to settle between you before you turn away. Itâs not much. Nothing serious. But itâs something. And it means a lot more than either of you will admit. You head up to the net, shaking hands with Shelton first, exhanging thank you's and congratulations', then Aryna. She raises an eyebrow, clearly aware of the dynamic she just witnessed.
âNice teamwork, you two,â she says, voice dripping with amusement.
You return her smirk. âSame to you, Sabby.â Her hand feels solid in yours, a rivalâs handshake, but youâre too caught up in the lingering heat of your own victory to care.
The umpireâs call fades into the background as you all exchange pleasantries, preparing for the obligatory PR photos. The media teams and sponsor representatives rush in, pushing cameras and microphones into your face. Youâre forced into the carefully choreographed smiles, standing side by side with Jannik as the photographers capture what feels like an entire lifetime of perfect moments: smiles too tight, poses too polished. You keep your eyes steady, even when you feel his presence next to you, too close for comfort. You wonder if heâs feeling it too, the strange tension that lingers in the space between you.
The session drags on, but finally, it's over. You escape to your hotel, the silence of your room welcoming you as you collapse onto the bed. You scroll through your phone, your feed already buzzing with highlights from the match, the photos, the reposts. You share your own, a subtle but confident caption. The whole world knows youâve won. The whole world knows youâve had this strange, unspoken moment with Jannik on court. Your phone buzzes again, this time a message from an unexpected source: Jannik.
You hesitate for a moment before opening it.
âGood match today.â
Itâs simple. Itâs cold. But something in the way itâs worded makes your heart skip. Maybe itâs the timing. Maybe itâs the fact heâs reached out at all. You type back slowly, keeping it casual.
âYeah, not bad for a forced teammate.â
The dots appear, then disappear. Then a reply, as brief and sharp as the last one:
âNot bad at all.â
And just like that, the door to something else creaks open.
yungbludz's rules <3
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Hi and welcome to my blog! I've been meaning to make this post for awhile to clear some things up and make this place less confusing.
I mainly write nsfw content, if you arenât 18+ donât read it nor interact with it please
If youâre a minor donât send me nsfw content/requests
No hate allowed on here. If you proceed to hate on anyone you will blocked and reported.
My backup account is: @yungbludz2
I can't believe Jannik didn't make a single vlog these months. What's the point of this youtube channel honestly
jannik sinner x f1 alpine driver!reader
summary: you are the only female driver in the grid. on race day, you happen to cross paths with a certain red headed tennis player.
a/n: my first fic! english isn't my first language so apologies in advance if i made any errors. also, i tried my best to be non-f1 fan friendly haha
The paddock buzzes with race day tension. Mechanics rush past with tires stacked shoulder-high, engineers juggle data on tablets, and camera crews swarm like bees. The scent of gasoline and espresso clings to the air, warm with late-summer Italian sun. You barely notice the commotion anymore.
You're used to the glances. The stares. You're the only woman on the grid, the first in years. They donât mean harm, most of them, but the weight of proving yourself has never really gone away. Itâs carved into your pre-race rituals. The cold splash of water on your face, the mental visualization, the deep breath before pulling your race suit over your fireproofs.
âY/N,â your race engineerâs voice crackles in your earpiece, breaking your focus. âGarage in ten. Weâre running checks on the floor. Your left side looked off in FP3.â
You nod, even though he canât see you, and turn toward the Alpine hospitality suite to grab your bottle and gloves. Thatâs when you catch a flicker of ginger hair and sunglasses across the walkway. Someone tall, lean, relaxed in a way no one else is right now. Not a driver.
Itâs Jannik Sinner.
Youâve seen his face before on TV, sports magazines, that tennis documentary Netflix pushed on you mid-flight. You donât follow tennis religiously, but you know him. Italian golden boy. Calm. Sharp. Unapologetically good. And apparently, a massive Formula 1 fan. Youâve heard heâs been to a few races before, he even met some of the boys from Red Bull last year.
Right now, heâs talking to Oscar Piastri, whoâs leaned casually against the McLaren garage wall, helmet tucked under one arm. Theyâre laughing about something, Jannikâs hand briefly clapping Oscar on the shoulder.
You march over, not because of Jannik, but because Oscar still owes you answers about that mess in qualifying yesterday.
You stop just in front of them, planting your hands on your hips. âPiastri,â you say, not looking at Jannik. âYou got a minute?â
Oscar gives you that signature dry smirk. âDidnât expect the Alpine missile this early.â
You roll your eyes. âYou blocked me in sector two. Again.â
Before Oscar can respond with something cheeky, Jannik clears his throat lightly. âYouâre Y/N, right?â
You finally meet his eyes. Your throat goes dry, and you don't know why.
âYeah,â you clear your throat. âYouâre the tennis guy.â
He laughs softly, polite. âThatâs one way to put it. Iâve seen you race. Big fan.â
Thereâs no condescension in his tone. No posturing. Just a simple truth. For some reason, it disarms you more than any media-trained compliment ever has.
Oscar glances between you two, eyes narrowing. âOh, great. Now youâve got Sinner rooting for Alpine.â
âJust this once,â Jannik says, grinning. âYou two were brilliant in Spa. That overtake into Eau RougeâŠâ
He trails off, mimicking your steering motion with his hands.
You arch a brow, an amused smile playing on your lips. âDidnât think tennis players watched F1 that closely.â
âOh, I grew up watching. Used to pretend I was Alonso when I was a kid. Built my own track with soda cans in the backyard.â He chuckles, then pauses, shifting slightly. âYouâve got a shot today, right?â
You shrug. âIf I survive Turn 1.â
âIâll be watching,â he says, his voice a little quieter now.
Oscar nudges him. âSheâs the real deal, mate. Donât blink or youâll miss her on the straight.â
You nod toward the garages. âI need to check in before the formation lap. But thanks for watching.â
You donât say ânice to meet you.â You donât shake his hand. The moment is small but electric, like the seconds before lights out. You only nod amd smile at him in appreciation before turning your back.
And as you walk away, you feel his eyes still on you.
âââ
Your heart is pounding so loud you can feel it in your neck.
Last lap.
The engine screams in your ears, and sweat drips down your temple beneath the helmet. Youâre gripping the wheel so tight your knuckles are white. Your engineerâs voice crackles into your headset, calm but sharp.
âLast lap. Youâre still holding second. Verstappen's only half a second ahead. Youâve got this.â
"Copy." You murmur.
The crowd is a blur; flags, flares, noise, just streaks of color around the circuit. You shift your focus back to the car ahead. Slipstreaming. Right behind. Just one chance.
You take a deep breath and throw the car down the inside at Turn 1. Itâs risky. Brave. Clean.
You pull ahead, and before you know it, you're leading the race.
Your engineer screams in your ear: âYes! Youâre leading! Bring it home!â
You fly through the final few corners, barely blinking, barely breathing. This is what you trained for. This is everything.
As you come out of the final bend, the straight opens up before youâand then, just ahead, a figure waves the black and white checkered flag, signaling the race is over.
Itâs Jannik.
Heâs standing tall on the stand, waving the flag with a wide grin, hair a little messy from the wind, sunglasses forgotten in his hand. You donât even know if he sees your car or recognizes that itâs you, but the moment feels electric.
You cross the finish line.
Winner.
You scream into the helmet. "LET'S GO! P1 BABY!" You roar in happiness, in disbelief.
âGREAT PACE! YOU DID IT!â your engineer roars. âP1! Thatâs a win! Take a slow lap, bring it in. You were unbelievable!â
The victory lap is a blur. Fans are on their feet. Your crew leans over the fences, cheering. You give a wave, still breathless. You can't stop cheering through the radio, turning the car into parc fermé.
By the time you pull into parc fermé, the spot where the top cars park post-race, you barely register the noise around you. You turn the engine off. The world goes quiet.
You climb onto your car, standing tall, fists pumping in the air. The crowd roars in response. You donât take the helmet off yet. You just let the noise soak in, hands over your head. You jump off of the car, and head straight for your team. The noise is deafening, their happy cheers and chants as they celebrate this legendary win.
You did it.
âââ
Later, after the national anthem, after the champagne is sprayed and your race suit is soaked and sticky with victory and celebration, you make your way down the steps of the podium. You run your fingers through your hair. Hair stuck to your forehead, and wipe the sweat away with the back of your glove.
Jannik is waiting just off to the side, now wearing a pass around his neck and a smile thatâs hard to miss.
âThat was insane,â he says. âSeriously. Iâve watched a lot of races, but that finish-â
âYou saw it?â you ask, eyebrows raised.
âI waved the flag, remember? I had the best seat in the house.â
You chuckle, looking up at him. âYou looked good up there.â
He gives you a modest shrug, but the blush on his cheeks betrays him. âI didnât think youâd notice. You were kind of busy winning a race.â
You let the smile linger before tipping your head slightly.
âYou coming to the afterparty?â
His brows lift slightly, as if surprised. âI didnât think I was invited.â
You glance at him sideways, playful. âWell, consider this your invitation.â
Thereâs a beat. A pause in the chaos, the media, the photographers yelling for one last shot, and for a moment, itâs just the two of you, sweaty and sunlit and still riding the high of the day.
He smiles and his eyes crinkle and you think you just might faint.
âThen I guess Iâll see you there.â
As much as I love gatekeeping my fics, I realize that the tennis community is in dire need of more Jannik Sinner fics. Here I come!
These are mostly self-indulgent. But hey, what's mine is yours.
Enjoy these works of mine, I hope you like them as much as I like them. Or not. haha!
I plan to write more of these, so look forward to more fics. Maybe about 2-3 business days, cause I've been such in a writing slump and it's horrendous.
Lights Out! â F1 Female Driver!Reader
One Love â Tennis Player!Reader
Come Back.. Be Here â Athlete!Reader (but it's not really prioritized in the fic), fic based on Taylor Swift's song
The Other Court â Former Tennis Player!Reader
In your orbit â Model!Reader
Everything has changed - Childhood fic (based off the song Everything Has Changed by Taylor)
so cute i put him in my pocket
the pout i am DYING
https://x.com/thementalfox/status/1921285787229827311?t=_UEcZQDIu8PSjWop0KFUYQ&s=19
just going to leave this here đ€
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