Jannik Sinner won the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters on Sunday, defeating Carlos Alcaraz 7-6(5), 6-3 in the final. The Italian claimed his first Monte-Carlo title while simultaneously reclaiming the world No. 1 ranking he had surrendered to the Spaniard earlier in 2026.
The match lived up to its billing for long stretches. A fiercely contested first set featured baseline rallies of breathtaking intensity, with the two best players on the planet trading blows for over an hour. Sinner found the opening in the tiebreak, converting his second set point with a surgical backhand pass. Alcaraz, who had saved two break points during the set, could not sustain the same level in the second. The Italian broke early and never relinquished the advantage.
This title places Sinner in an extraordinarily exclusive club. He becomes only the second player in history to complete the "Sunshine Double" (Indian Wells and Miami) and Monte Carlo in the same season. Only Novak Djokovic had previously achieved this feat, back in 2015. Sinner also joins Djokovic and Rafael Nadal as the only players to win four consecutive Masters 1000 titles.
In the rankings, Sinner now sits at 67 weeks atop the ATP standings, one more than Alcaraz. The rivalry between the two continues to define the season, but the momentum clearly belongs to the Italian. Since the start of the year, Sinner boasts a near-perfect record at Masters 1000 events, a winning streak that evokes the finest stretches of the Big 3 era.
Alcaraz acknowledged his rival's superiority on Sunday. The Spaniard, who was defending his Monte-Carlo crown, had anticipated losing the top spot as early as the quarterfinals. His consolation: Barcelona starts Monday on a clay surface he knows intimately, and without Sinner in the draw. The new world No. 1 has opted to skip the Catalan tournament to preserve his fitness ahead of Madrid and Roland-Garros.
For Sinner, this clay-court triumph in Monte Carlo sends a powerful message. Long regarded as a hard-court specialist, the 24-year-old Italian is proving he can dominate on any surface. The question is no longer whether he can win Roland-Garros, but when.



