Sinner, what a pizza: it’s business as usual. Fans are never happy, but this time many of them are really on the rampage.
There are 3 things Jannik Sinner just can’t say no to. In fact, 4, if we also count his girlfriend with breathtaking curves, namely the beautiful Maria Braccini. The South Tyrolean champion is ironclad when it comes to diet and nutrition, but there’s something he really can’t resist.
Sweets, for starters, which are his ultimate sin of gluttony. But he is also a huge fan of sushi, and he has a real weakness, demonstrating his often questioned Italian-ness, for pizza. He only rarely indulges in one, given his caloric intake not quite in keeping with an athlete’s routine, but when he does he enjoys it like there’s no tomorrow. And who knows then if, on the occasion of his next visit to the kingdom of Charles III, he will go and try the very famous pizza that has been on everyone’s lips – literally – in recent hours.
You may be legitimately wondering what is so special about it, and it fits. We will, therefore, give you a little taste. A sneak peek. Let’s start by saying that on the menu of a British pizzeria suddenly appeared, a few days ago, a pizza dedicated to none other than the runner-up of the Nitto Atp Finals.
Sinner, what a pizza: no one is ever happy
Launching the pizza inspired by the South Tyrolean champion, in a manifest attempt to ride the Sinner mania that is going crazy everywhere, is pizzeria Zia Lucia, in Wembley. A very cute and clever idea, were it not for a detail that, on balance, has divided the tennis audience.
A real bomb, the delicious delicacy loosely inspired by the Jannik phenomenon. It’s topped with broccoli velouté, pork sausage, mozzarella, and rosemary-flavored roasted potatoes-all for the modest sum of 15.50 pounds. The San Candido native couldn’t eat it, line-conscious as he is, but this supercaloric mix is sure to make dozens and dozens of customers lick their chops.
Where, then, is the problem? In the absence, in the filling of this beautiful pizza, of an absolutely essential element: carrots. So many users and sinneristi have wondered on social media how the pizzaiolo could have forgotten to add some, given that the carrot has now become Jannik’s undisputed symbol. And then there are those who, on the other hand, shuddered at such an unusual mix of ingredients: “More than a tribute,” he pointed out, “we should speak of defamation. Because, as usual, there are those who want it cooked and those who want it raw.