Jannik Sinner steps onto the Caja Mágica clay on Friday carrying a staggering statistic. Twenty consecutive wins in Masters 1000 events. Four straight titles. A run without precedent in the Open Era.
Paris, Indian Wells, Miami, Monte-Carlo. Since November 2025, the world number one has not lost a single match at the highest tier of ATP tournaments below the Grand Slams. His dominance extends beyond mere results — it is visible in the manner, in the way he suffocates opponents set after set, tournament after tournament.
The numbers are remarkable. Thirty-seven consecutive sets won before Tomas Machac managed to snatch one in the third round at Monte-Carlo. The Czech could do nothing in the other two. Sinner simply resumed his march and lifted the Monte-Carlo trophy without dropping a match.
The all-time record belongs to Novak Djokovic, who strung together 31 consecutive Masters 1000 wins during his legendary 2011 season, from the second round of Indian Wells through the Cincinnati final. Sinner sits at 20. Eleven more wins would match the Serb.
What makes the Italian's streak particularly striking is its cross-surface nature. Djokovic built his record primarily on hard courts. Sinner has conquered Paris (indoor hard), Indian Wells and Miami (outdoor hard), then Monte-Carlo (clay). Four different contexts, four titles. That versatility elevates this run beyond simple consistency.
Madrid represents the most ambitious stage of this quest. The high-altitude clay of the Caja Mágica produces a hybrid brand of tennis, blending hard-court speed with clay-court rallies. Sinner has thrived here before, winning the 2024 title on this very court.
His opponent today, Benjamin Bonzi, a qualifier who defeated compatriot Droguet in the first round, is unlikely to halt this momentum. The real challenges lie deeper in the draw, perhaps against Joao Fonseca or Alex de Minaur in the same quarter.
Five consecutive Masters 1000 titles. Nobody has ever done it. Sinner has the chance to write a chapter that even Djokovic, and never managed. At the rate he is moving, Madrid looks like just another stop on a season that is already defying the history books.

