Jannik Sinner won the Madrid Open by beating Alexander Zverev in straight sets, becoming the first player in ATP Masters 1000 history to win five consecutive titles.

Jannik Sinner made ATP Masters 1000 history on Sunday by beating Alexander Zverev in the Madrid Open final and becoming the first player ever to win five consecutive titles at that level.

Sinner won 6-1, 6-2 to claim his first Madrid Open title. Official ATP coverage said the run completes a sequence that also includes titles in Paris, Indian Wells, Miami and Monte-Carlo.

The victory extends one of the most dominant stretches in recent men’s tennis. It also gives Sinner another major hard-court and clay-court benchmark as he continues to build his record in the Masters 1000 series.

The final

The match was one-sided from the start, with Sinner controlling the pace against Zverev and closing out the straight-sets win in routine fashion.

ATP coverage said the result makes Sinner the first player in the history of the Masters 1000 format to win five tournaments in a row.

Why it matters

The Madrid title is Sinner’s first in the Spanish capital and adds another high-profile trophy to a rapidly growing career record. The streak gives him a unique place in the Masters 1000 era and sets a new standard for sustained success at the sport’s highest regular-tier events.

Revision note

Initial automated publication.