A Dominant Performance by Jannik Sinner
Throughout the week in Madrid, the presence of Jude Bellingham and Thibaut Courtois watching matches at the Caja Mágica became a regular sight. Both were seen with great interest, but they couldn’t attend Sunday’s final due to Real Madrid’s match against Espanyol that evening. However, they didn’t miss much, as Jannik Sinner delivered a stunning performance against Alexander Zverev in just 57 minutes. This was the second-fastest Masters 1000 final without a retirement, proving that the match was over before many could blink.
This day was all about numbers. Sinner made history by becoming the first player to win five consecutive Masters 1000 tournaments, a run that started at the end of last season in Paris and continued through the first four events of this season: Indian Wells and Miami on hard court, and Monte Carlo and Madrid on clay. This achievement is something even Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, or Roger Federer couldn’t accomplish during their prime.
Sinner’s last defeat at a Masters tournament was a third-round retirement in Shanghai. Since then, he has won 28 matches in a row at Masters events. As he returns to Rome for the Italian Open, he has the chance to surpass Federer’s longest winning run of 29 wins and then Djokovic’s record of 31. He could also become just the second player, after Djokovic, to complete the set of nine current Masters tournaments if he wins his first title in Rome. Despite this, Sinner insists he doesn’t “play for records.” Imagine what he could achieve if he did.
Zverev, who was left to describe Sinner’s dominance, expressed concern for the rest of the competition. “Today I would have lost to anybody, to be very fair. I think today I played an awful tennis match,” said the world No 3. “It’s quite simple. I think there’s a big gap between Sinner and everybody else. And I think there’s a big gap between Alcaraz, myself, maybe Novak, and everybody else. There are two gaps right now.”
This is worrying because next month, Sinner will head to Roland Garros as one of the biggest favorites ahead of a men’s grand slam title since Djokovic’s last Wimbledon title four years ago. Carlos Alcaraz, the defending champion in Paris, will be absent due to a wrist injury. Zverev, who will replace Alcaraz as the second seed, was just defeated 6-1 6-2 in the final of his best clay-court event, admitting that Sinner is in a league of his own. Although Djokovic beat Sinner at this year’s Australian Open, he hasn’t played since March and will soon turn 39.
Of course, Sinner should be applauded for his incredible run, his ability to reset point by point, match by match, and week by week, and for consistently bringing his best level. If it were easy, everyone would do it; consistency in approach, execution, and intensity is often the hardest test of all.
“As I always said, I cannot compare myself with Rafa, Roger, Novak,” Sinner said in Madrid. “What they did, it’s something incredible. I don’t play for these records, or I don’t play for records in general. I play for myself. I play for my team, because they know what’s behind. Also my family, because with the success I’ve had, they also never changed how they are towards me… It means, of course, a lot, great numbers. But there is a lot of discipline, a lot of sacrifice behind this.”

“There’s also daily routines that I put in. I’m the first person who needs to be ready in the morning to wake up. I like the journey. I like to put myself in the best possible position to be the best version of myself. I don’t play for other records. As I said, what the other players did in the past, and Novak’s still doing, it’s something incredible. I cannot compare myself with them.”
But his laser-like focus and recent dominance are undeniable. Sinner started this season’s run by becoming the first player to win Indian Wells-Miami double without dropping a set. He then chased down Alcaraz and reclaimed world No 1 with a victory over his rival in Monte Carlo. With Alcaraz absent, Sinner has his eyes on an all-time run that could encompass Rome and Roland Garros as well. For now, the competition seems inconsequential, except for Djokovic.






