Jannik Sinner’s coaches had just begun speaking with reporters at the Australian Open on Friday night when they were interrupted by a gate crasher.
Unbeknown to Darren Cahill and Simone Vagnozzi, Sinner was watching on from the side of Melbourne Park’s main media room with the intention of heckling his two mentors.
Yelling out to Cahill, he jokingly asked what it was like to be his coach, to which the affable Australian replied amid much laughter: “We are not paid enough.”
Such moments illustrate the camaraderie that Cahill enjoys with Sinner and his support team.
Cahill describes the close-knit culture they have developed as feeling like a “family”, revealing they have a lot of fun in each other’s company.
But they also know when to knuckle down and work hard, with each team member mindful of their own responsibilities.
Cahill is quick to highlight the work done by Vagnozzi, saying the former Italian professional deserved “99 per cent of the credit” for Sinner’s success, while he is playing more of an “overseeing role”.
Vagnozzi began working with Sinner in February 2022, before Cahill signed up later that year, and under their guidance the Italian has achieved new heights in his career.
In 2023, he won his maiden Masters 1000 title in Toronto, reached the ATP Finals decider and finished the year ranked number four in the world.
The momentum has continued through to the Australian Open, with Sinner to contest his first major final following his 6-1, 6-2, 6-7 (6/8), 6-3 victory over 10-time champion Novak Djokovic in the semis on Friday.
“He [Sinner] gets on the practice court, he takes the information, and he loves to work on things that are going to make him a better tennis player,” Cahill said.
“For us, as coaches, it was really rewarding today to sit there and see him do some of those things.
“We knew that Novak was struggling in the first couple of sets. Everybody could see that.
“But we also knew that Novak was going to make a huge push in the third and fourth sets. He [Sinner] did an amazing job.”
Cahill may be modest in detailing his involvement in coaching Sinner, but his influence cannot be underestimated, nor has it gone unnoticed.
After his loss to Sinner, Djokovic praised Cahill and noted it is “very helpful” for his younger rival to have the renowned coach in his corner, given his experience in guiding players to win major titles.
Cahill coached Lleyton Hewitt when he won the 2001 US Open as a 20-year-old, before they parted ways soon after his fellow South Australian became world number one.
Only months later, Cahill teamed up with Andre Agassi and inside a year the American reclaimed the number-one ranking and won his fourth Australian Open in 2003.
More recently, Cahill coached Romanian Simona Halep to her 2018 French Open victory, as well as the top ranking on the WTA standings.
Vagnozzi cites Cahill’s experience at the business-end of the majors as being crucial to Sinner’s run in Melbourne.
In Sinner, Cahill sees similar traits that helped Hewitt, Agassi and Halep enjoy the ultimate success in tennis.
“The work ethic, purpose, desire, willingness to learn, tennis IQ of all those champions is fantastic,” Cahill said.
“Jannik has all that. He’s got the qualities I believe that a lot of the great champions in the game have, but you’ve got to start winning to let that come to fruition.
“So, he’s making little steps. He had a good finish to the year last year. He gained a lot of belief from what he was able to do.”
Cahill’s coaching education
As a coach, Cahill has been able to draw upon his career as a professional tennis player.
He was a US Open semifinalist in 1988 and achieved a ranking of 22 the following year, but injury cruelly interrupted his time on tour.
Outside of tennis, however, is where Cahill learned a lot about coaching as the son of an Australian rules great.
His father John Cahill is an Australian Football Hall of Fame inductee, having won 10 SANFL premierships with Port Adelaide as a coach and multiple flags as a player.
He was also Port Adelaide’s foundation coach when the club joined the AFL in 1997.
Cahill junior has enjoyed a lifelong friendship with Port Adelaide’s 2004 AFL premiership coach Mark Williams, whose father Fos was a legendary figure in South Australian football as both a player and coach.
Mark Williams was among the crowd inside Rod Laver Arena for Sinner’s match against Djokovic, with the Port Adelaide connection having always run strong for Cahill.
“Ninety-five per cent of my coaching throughout my entire career was learned through the Port Adelaide Football Club,” Cahill said.
“It’s just what I was brought up with, with my dad coaching there for so many years and being successful there, and being around a club and people that experience success.
“I guess there are some habits and some cultures, and some ways of coaching that never leave you.”
What Cahill was taught through his experiences with Port Adelaide is now helping him play a significant part in Sinner’s push for a first major title.
“We have a really good feeling within the team,” he said.
“Whether he [Sinner] wins or loses, we’ve taken our shares of losses — tough losses as well — but nothing changes within the team.
“Everybody enjoys each other’s company. It’s been really important for him to enjoy the journey as well.”