On Monday, July 3, the opening day of Wimbledon, Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner strode onto center court carrying a custom-made Gucci duffel bag.
More than a week later, the move is still causing a racket.
The 21-year-old Sinner became an ambassador for the Florence-born Italian megabrand last year. He鈥檚 known for his polite and calm demeanor 鈥 on and off the court 鈥 and respectfully adhered to the All-England Club鈥檚 strict dress code, which requires that players wear all white. But 厂颈苍苍别谤鈥檚 high-end choice of carry-on marked the first time in the centuries-old, carefully-regulated tournament that a luxury logo-bearing bag had been brought on court 鈥 hence the media storm that followed.
The bag features the label鈥檚 iconic brown-on-tan GG motif, and the customary red and green striped straps. Personalized with the initials 鈥淛S鈥 to signify the collaboration between the athlete and Gucci, the 鈥渄arling of duffels鈥 is likely to make many more appearances on the court throughout the rest of the 2023-24 season 鈥 as it should, given how protracted the approval process was. As reported by The New York Times, Gucci and 厂颈苍苍别谤鈥檚 management jointly worked to get the bag green-lighted by the International Tennis Federation, the Association of Tennis Professionals and the Grand Slams, including Wimbledon, to ensure that it met standards.
Sinner the sellout?

Since 厂颈苍苍别谤鈥檚 court-as-catwalk moment, the fashion press has had a field day. Vogue Business positioned Sinner as the ringleader of 鈥渁 new cohort of young tennis players express[ing] a growing interest in fashion,鈥 to the delight of luxury brands ready to 鈥渉arness the sport鈥檚 growing appeal.鈥 The Guardian鈥檚 fashion editor Morwenna Ferrier wrote that the deal between Sinner and Gucci was 鈥渓eading a fashion revolution.鈥
But some ordinary fans and comment-section critics have been a little less gushy about the Gucci-Sinner arrangement.
厂颈苍苍别谤鈥檚 , features the now-famous photo of him entering the court with the bag slung over his shoulder, followed by a series of GQ shoot-ready close-ups of the bag鈥檚 details. Some commenters didn鈥檛 hesitate to share their skepticism, suggesting Sinner focus 鈥渕ore on tennis and less on brands鈥 (@eribrenna), or that he鈥檚 鈥渁nother [athlete] who by now is thinking about nothing more than money and will never win a thing鈥 (@nypaolo). @berk_tuzuner lamented, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 next? Prada shoes on clay? Rackets by Audemars Piget?鈥 and @aa21pirlo chided him, 鈥淲e want the Wimbledon Cup, not bags.鈥
And the cup isn鈥檛 yet in the bag 鈥 so to speak. So far in the tournament, the No. 8 seed Sinner has defeated Juan Manuel Cerundolo from Argentina in the first round and Cerundolo鈥檚 fellow Argentine, Diego Schwartzman, in the second. In the third, Sinner beat Quentin Halys from France, then bested Colombia鈥檚 Daniel Elahi Galan in the round of 16. In the quarterfinals with Russian Roman Safiullin, 厂颈苍苍别谤鈥檚 eventual win made him only the third Italian (and the youngest man) to reach the semifinals at Wimbledon since 2007.
Today, Friday, July 14, Janik faces his biggest challenge in the tournament so far by going up against Novak Djokovic. The match could prove to be a defining moment for the lanky Italian.
Regardless of the outcome on the court, or the skeptics in the comments sections, it鈥檚 fair to say that when it comes to la bella figura 鈥 cutting a fine figure, dressing well and making a good impression 鈥 天美传媒 and Sinner have already won.