Tennis-Unstoppable Sinner surges into Rome semis with record 32nd straight Masters 1000 win


Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 14, 2026 Italy's Jannik Sinner celebrates winning his quarter final match against Russia's Andrey Rublev REUTERS/Ciro De Luca

ROME, May 14 (Reuters) - Jannik Sinner continued his ⁠ominous form ahead of the French Open as the Italian world number one set a record with ⁠his 32nd consecutive Masters 1000 victory, brushing aside Russia's Andrey Rublev 6-2 6-4 to reach the Italian ‌Open semi-finals on Thursday.

Sinner has now moved clear of Novak Djokovic's record and set his sights on further milestones. Djokovic remains the only man to have won all nine Masters 1000 events - a feat Sinner, 24, could match if he goes on to lift the title on home soil ​in Rome.

"I don't play for records. I play just for my own ⁠story," Sinner said.

Sinner awaits former world number one ⁠Daniil Medvedev or Spanish youngster Martin Landaluce, who play later on Thursday.

"At the same time, it means a lot ⁠to ‌me, but tomorrow is another opponent. We're going to play in different conditions - it's going to be a night match," Sinner added.

"Now the highest priority for me is trying to recover as much as I can physically. ⁠We'll see how it goes.

"Emotionally, it takes a lot playing here at ​home. At the same time, I'll ‌definitely try to do my best. It's a win-win situation for me in any case. It was ⁠a good day today."

The ​top seed set the tone early, breaking Rublev, seeded 12th, in the opening game and quickly consolidating for a 2-0 lead. Rublev got on the board to pull back to 2-1, but Sinner held firm in a lengthy fourth game, saving break points to move ⁠ahead 3-1.

From there, Sinner remained in control, breaking again at 5-2 ​before calmly serving out the opening set.

He made another fast start in the second set, securing an early break and keeping Rublev at arm's length before a brief pushback from the former world number five.

Sinner wrapped up the straight-sets victory in one ⁠hour and 31 minutes, striking 19 winners.

The home crowd chanted his name after he sealed the record.

Earlier this month, Sinner became the first man to win five consecutive Masters 1000 titles when he lifted the Madrid Open trophy, adding to recent triumphs in Paris, Indian Wells, Miami and Monte Carlo.

With Rome the only title missing from his collection, Sinner is ​aiming to go one better than last year, when he was beaten in the ⁠final by Carlos Alcaraz.

The 23-year-old Spaniard, a seven-times Grand Slam winner, is nursing a wrist injury and is out of ​the French Open, potentially clearing Sinner's path to a first Roland Garros title - ‌the only Grand Slam missing from his illustrious trophy cabinet.

In ​this form, Sinner looks virtually unstoppable and will be eyeing a fifth Grand Slam crown when the French Open main draw gets underway on May 24.

(Reporting by Pearl Josephine Nazare in Bengaluru;Editing by Christian Radnedge)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tennis

Tennis-Darderi outlasts Jodar in late-night epic to reach Italian Open semi-finals
Tennis-Coppa Italia fireworks trigger surreal smoke delay at Italian Open
Tennis-Italian Musetti withdraws from French Open due to thigh injury
Tennis-Swiatek sweeps past Pegula to set up Rome semi-final showdown with Svitolina
Tennis-Murray to join Draper's team ahead of Wimbledon
Tennis-Sinner equals Djokovic's 31-match Masters run, marches into Rome quarters
Tennis-'No expiration date for ambition and dreams': Cirstea powers into Rome semis
Tennis-Rune skips Hamburg, French Open to continue Achilles recovery
Tennis-Ukraine's Svitolina saddened by IOC decision on Belarus athletes
Tennis-Sabalenka exits Rome with injury concern ahead of French Open

Others Also Read