Tennis-Sinner thrashes Zverev in Madrid to claim record fifth successive Masters title


Tennis - Madrid Open - Park Manzanares, Madrid, Spain - May 3, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner in action during his men's final match against Germany's Alexander Zverev REUTERS/Ana Beltran

MADRID, May 3 (Reuters) - ⁠World number one Jannik Sinner became the first man to win five ⁠successive Masters 1000 titles after he produced a breathtaking display to crush Alexander ‌Zverev 6-1 6-2 in just 57 minutes in the Madrid Open final on Sunday.

The 24-year-old Italian underlined his authority on the men’s tour by becoming the first man to claim the season’s opening four ​Masters events, extending a run that has spanned hardcourts ⁠and clay.

Following his Paris triumph late ⁠last season, Sinner has proved to be an unbeatable force at Indian Wells, Miami, ⁠Monte ‌Carlo and now Madrid.

It was Sinner’s 10th win in 14 meetings with Zverev and his ninth in a row since the German last beat him ⁠at the 2023 U.S. Open. Across that nine-match sequence, Zverev ​has managed only two ‌sets.

Sinner raced through the Madrid final, turning a marquee contest into a one-sided ⁠affair and ​leaving little doubt about the current balance of power at the top of the sport.

“Please consider taking a break so you can leave something for us mortals,” Zverev said during the trophy ⁠ceremony.

“Playing against Sinner right now is just so ​hard. He leaves us no chance.”

Sinner set the tone immediately, opening the match with an ace and two unreturnable serves. He broke Zverev in the second game and surged to ⁠a 3-0 lead, striking the ball cleanly off the clay as the German struggled to find his rhythm.

After breaking serve again to lead 4-0, Sinner had conceded just five points through the opening five games. Zverev briefly held to make it 5-1, but ​Sinner closed out the set with an ace after ⁠25 minutes.

The second set offered only fleeting resistance. After both players held serve early on, ​Sinner broke in the third game following another Zverev ‌unforced error and never looked back.

He moved ​comfortably to 4-2 before breaking again and then served out the match without difficulty to complete the rout.

(Reporting by Fernando Kallas, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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