Jannik Sinner arrives in Madrid carrying a number that commands attention: 20 consecutive victories at ATP Masters 1000 events. Since falling to Novak Djokovic in the Shanghai final last October, the Italian has not lost a single match at this level. Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo — three straight titles without dropping a beat.
The most staggering stat may be another one entirely. Sinner won 37 consecutive sets at Masters 1000 events before Tomas Machac finally took one off him in the Monte-Carlo fourth round. Thirty-seven sets without conceding a single one. That goes beyond talent into the realm of mechanical consistency.
Only six players in history have reached 20 consecutive wins at this level. Djokovic holds the all-time record with 31. Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal also belong to this exclusive club. Sinner joined them at just 24 — an age where most of his predecessors were only beginning their dominant runs.
The Monte-Carlo final set the terms of the current debate at the top of men's tennis. Sinner defeated Carlos Alcaraz 6-3, 6-4 to reclaim the world No.1 ranking with 13,400 points, leading the Spaniard by 160. What stands out is the manner: Sinner does not survive these finals. He suffocates his opponents.
In Madrid, the draw opens up in front of him like rarely before. Alcaraz and Djokovic have both withdrawn. Sinner faces a qualifier in the second round, Gabriel Diallo in the third, Tommy Paul in the fourth, and Alex De Minaur in the quarterfinals. Two under-the-radar threats lurk in De Minaur's section: Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca and Spaniard Rafael Jodar, who won Marrakech and reached the Barcelona semifinals.
Sinner has never gone past the quarterfinals in Madrid. The altitude at the Caja Magica speeds up conditions and rewards big servers, which could theoretically disrupt his baseline game. But the 2026 version of Sinner has proven surface-proof. His current streak spans American hardcourt, indoor conditions, and Monegasque clay.
If Sinner stays on course, he could face the survivor of the draw's most explosive quarter — featuring Ben Shelton, Arthur Fils and Lorenzo Musetti — in the semifinals. Eleven more wins and he matches Djokovic's all-time Masters 1000 record. Madrid could be where history starts to take shape.

