Sunday at the Caja Magica, Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev meet for the Mutua Madrid Open title. The stakes go well beyond another trophy: Sinner can write a page of history that no one has ever written.
Since winning the Paris-Bercy final last November, the world number one has not lost a single Masters 1000 match. Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo: three consecutive titles that have pushed the boundaries of what was thought possible. A fifth straight title at this level has never been achieved in the Open era.
Sinner's numbers in Madrid are staggering. Zero sets dropped in five matches. Not a single break point conceded in the semifinal. 87% of first-serve points won against Fils. The Italian is playing flawless tennis, every shot seemingly calibrated to the millimeter.
Zverev knows the Madrid recipe better than anyone. A two-time champion at the Caja Magica (2018, 2021), the German is contesting his fourth final here, a figure only Federer and Nadal had previously reached. His thirtieth win in Madrid, secured against Blockx in the semis, speaks to a rare connection with the tournament.
Zverev's problem has a name: Sinner. The German has lost eight consecutive meetings against the Italian. The overall record (4-9) offers little comfort. In their last four Masters 1000 encounters, Zverev has failed to take a single set. To reverse this trend, he will need a radically different game plan.
The key for Zverev lies in his serve. Against Blockx, he won 86% of first-serve points. If he can maintain that level and shorten rallies, he may deny Sinner his cruising rhythm. Zverev's down-the-line backhand, when placed with precision, remains one of the few weapons capable of unsettling Sinner.
For the Italian, the equation is simpler: impose his baseline consistency, dictate the tempo, and wait for openings. His return game, among the best on tour, will put immediate pressure on Zverev's service games.
This is the fifth consecutive Masters 1000 meeting between the two men. A rivalry that is shaping the season, even if the balance tilts heavily to one side. On Sunday, Zverev will need the match of his life to stop Sinner from making history.


