Jannik Sinner Breaks Novak Djokovic Record as He Storms Into Italian Open Semi-Finals
ROME — The roar from the Foro Italico on Thursday afternoon was not just a celebration of a victory. It was the sound of history being rewritten. Jannik Sinner, the 23-year-old world No. 1 from South Tyrol, did more than just dismantle Andrey Rublev in straight sets. He shattered a record held by the greatest player to ever touch a tennis racket: Novak Djokovic.
With his commanding 6-2, 6-4 win over the world No. 14, Sinner secured his 32nd consecutive victory in Masters 1000 events—the most prestigious tournaments outside of the Grand Slams. That streak surpasses Djokovic’s previous record of 31, a mark many believed would stand for years. But Sinner is not playing by anyone else’s timeline.
“I don’t play for records. I play just for my own story,” Sinner said after the match, his expression as calm as his baseline game. “And obviously at the same time it means a lot to me.”
It means a lot to Italian tennis, too. Sinner now stands just two victories away from etching his name into Italian tennis history as the first home man to clinch the Italian Open title in half a century. The last Italian man to lift the singles trophy on the red clay of the Foro Italico was Adriano Panatta in 1976—a full 49 years ago.
Panatta himself is set to present this year’s title to the champion on Sunday, with Italy’s President Sergio Mattarella also expected to attend the final. The stage could not be more perfectly set for Sinner to deliver a moment that transcends sport.
The Record That Redefines Dominance
Let’s put this record in perspective. Novak Djokovic has won a record 40 Masters 1000 titles. He is the benchmark for consistency at the highest level. To break any of his records is an achievement reserved for the all-time greats. But to break a streak record—especially one built on mental stamina and physical resilience—is a statement of a different magnitude.
Sinner’s 32-match winning run in Masters 1000 events includes titles at Shanghai (2024) and Miami (2025), as well as deep runs at Indian Wells and Monte Carlo. What makes this streak even more remarkable is the caliber of opponents he has faced during this stretch:
- Carlos Alcaraz (twice)
- Daniil Medvedev (three times)
- Andrey Rublev (twice, including Thursday)
- Stefanos Tsitsipas (once)
- Alexander Zverev (once)
“He’s playing a different sport right now,” said Rublev after the match, shaking his head in the press conference. “You try to hit through him, he’s faster. You try to drop-shot, he reads it. You try to serve big, he steps in and takes time away. There is no weakness.”
The numbers back that up. Sinner won 82% of his first-serve points against Rublev and did not face a single break point until the second set. His backhand down the line was surgical, his movement on the clay was balletic, and his mental composure was, as always, ice-cold.
Two Wins from Immortality: The Italian Dream
History is a heavy weight, but Sinner carries it with the same ease he carries a running forehand. The last Italian man to win the Italian Open, Adriano Panatta, did so in 1976—a time when Bjorn Borg was just beginning his reign and John McEnroe was still a teenager. Since then, Italian men have come close but never closed the deal.
Consider the near-misses:
- Fabio Fognini reached the semi-finals in 2018 and 2019 but fell short.
- Matteo Berrettini made the final in 2021 but lost to Novak Djokovic.
- Jannik Sinner himself lost in the quarter-finals to Stefanos Tsitsipas in 2022.
Now, the path is clear. Sinner will face either Holger Rune or Alex de Minaur in the semi-finals. On paper, both are dangerous. On clay, Sinner is a different species entirely.
“I’m not thinking about Sunday yet,” Sinner said, deflecting the inevitable question about Panatta’s looming presence. “I have a semi-final to play. Every match here is like a final for me. The crowd gives me so much energy, but I have to stay focused on what I can control.”
That focus is what separates Sinner from his predecessors. Where previous Italian stars let the weight of home expectations crack their composure, Sinner seems to grow more serene under pressure. It is a quality that has drawn comparisons to Rafael Nadal—not in style, but in the ability to treat every point as its own universe.
French Open Looming: Sinner’s Clay-Court Credentials
With the French Open beginning in just 10 days, Sinner’s form in Rome is sending a clear message to the rest of the ATP Tour: he is the man to beat at Roland Garros.
Let’s examine the evidence. Sinner has now won 17 of his last 18 matches on clay, with his only loss coming to Carlos Alcaraz in a tight three-setter at the Madrid Open earlier this month. His movement on the surface has improved dramatically, sliding into shots with the grace of a natural clay-courter. His heavy topspin forehand is kicking up high, and his slice backhand is neutralizing opponents who try to rush him.
“He’s the favorite for Roland Garros right now, and it’s not even close,” said former world No. 3 and tennis analyst Mats Wilander in a recent interview. “Alcaraz has the flair, Djokovic has the history, but Sinner has the consistency. On clay, consistency kills.”
Should Sinner win the Italian Open, he would become the first man since Rafael Nadal in 2018 to complete the “Rome-Paris double”—winning both the Italian Open and the French Open in the same season. That is the kind of achievement that defines a legacy.
But Sinner is not looking that far ahead. His team, led by coaches Simone Vagnozzi and Darren Cahill, has emphasized a process-over-outcome approach. Cahill, who previously coached Andre Agassi and Lleyton Hewitt, has called Sinner “the most coachable player I’ve ever worked with.”
“He doesn’t get distracted by noise,” Cahill said earlier this week. “He doesn’t check social media after matches. He doesn’t read the press clippings. He just wants to get better. That’s rare.”
Expert Analysis: What Makes Sinner Unstoppable Right Now
From a technical standpoint, Sinner’s game has evolved into something close to complete. Here is what the data and the tape tell us:
- Serve improvement: Sinner’s first-serve percentage has climbed to 68% during this tournament, up from 63% at the start of the year. He is using the kick serve effectively on clay to set up his patterns.
- Return of serve: He is winning 42% of return points on clay, a number that rivals Djokovic’s best seasons.
- Net play: Sinner is coming forward more often, winning 76% of his net points in Rome. That aggression is shortening points and saving energy.
- Mental fortitude: In his last 10 Masters 1000 matches, Sinner has won the first set every single time. That statistic is almost unheard of at this level.
“He’s not just a baseliner anymore,” said Patrick Mouratoglou, the renowned coach. “He’s a complete player. He can defend, he can attack, he can serve-and-volley. That’s what champions do—they adapt.”
The comparison to Djokovic is inevitable, and not just because of the record. Like Djokovic, Sinner has an almost robotic ability to maintain intensity across long rallies. Like Djokovic, he improves as matches go deeper. And like Djokovic, he seems to find his best tennis when the stakes are highest.
But Sinner is his own player. He plays with a faster racquet head speed than Djokovic, generating more spin. He is taller and longer, covering the court with fewer steps. And he is younger—significantly younger. At 23, Sinner has already won two Grand Slams (Australian Open 2024 and 2025) and a Masters 1000 title. The ceiling is not visible.
Conclusion: The King of Rome in Waiting
Rome has waited 49 years for a home champion. On Sunday, that wait may finally end. Jannik Sinner has broken Novak Djokovic’s record, stormed into the semi-finals, and positioned himself as the overwhelming favorite to lift the trophy in front of a delirious home crowd.
But for Sinner, this is not about records or history. It is about a story—his story—written one point, one match, one tournament at a time. He does not play for the ghosts of the past or the hype of the present. He plays for the relentless pursuit of perfection.
“I play for my own story,” he said. And if that story includes a Roman triumph on Sunday, followed by a run at Roland Garros, then Italian tennis will have found its greatest chapter yet.
The Foro Italico is ready. Adriano Panatta is ready. The President is ready. And Jannik Sinner, the man who just broke Novak Djokovic’s record, is ready to make history his own.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
