The quarterfinals of the Rome Masters 1000 offer a lineup as rich as it is unusual. With the early elimination of Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev's spectacular fall against Luciano Darderi, the draw has opened up for a new generation of players no longer willing to wait.
The headline matchup pits Jannik Sinner, riding a historic 31-match winning streak in Masters 1000 events, against Andrey Rublev. The world number one, carried by the Foro Italico crowd, is now chasing a record that once seemed untouchable. Facing him, the Russian remains a formidable clay-court opponent, capable of devastating baseline power.
On the other side of the draw, Daniil Medvedev faces Martín Landaluce, a lucky loser who carved an unexpected path to the last eight. The Medvedev clay-court paradox continues to fascinate: long considered unsuited to this surface, the Russian has nonetheless reached the Rome quarterfinals, proving that his adaptability knows no bounds.
Casper Ruud takes on Karen Khachanov in a clash of styles. The Norwegian, 2022 Roland-Garros finalist, is finding consistency again on his favorite surface. His devastating topspin and baseline solidity make him a serious contender for the semifinals.
But the most romantic matchup remains the clash between Rafael Jodar, the 19-year-old Spanish prodigy, and Luciano Darderi, the local hero who saved four match points before bageling Zverev. Two different paths, the same energy: that of a generation seizing power.
This quarterfinal draw tells a story. One of a tour in full transformation, where Sinner's dominance coexists with the emergence of talents unknown just a year ago. Rome 2026, more than a tournament, has become the stage for an accelerated changing of the guard.


