Sinner closing in on a 29‑match winning streak after Madrid run
- Jannik Sinner beat Rafael Jódar 6-2, 7-6(0) on April 29 to reach the Madrid semifinals, stretching his match winning streak to 21. (atptour.com) - Rome starts May 6 in a 96-player draw with byes for top seeds, so Sinner would need five wins there to reach 26. (atptour.com) - That matters because Sinner has already won Indian Wells, Miami and Monte-Carlo, and is chasing another Masters milestone on clay. (atptour.com)
Jannik Sinner’s Madrid run has turned into a bigger story than just one more semifinal. The real intrigue is the number attached to it — 21 st(atptour.com) That puts a 29-match streak in play soon, but the path is a little more specific than the headline makes it sound. (atptour.com)nning run and his ridiculous Masters 1000 tear. (atptour.com) ### What happene(atptour.com)Madrid Open on Wednesday, April 29, and moved into a semifinal against Arthur Fils. The win pushed Sinner’s current match winning streak to 21, and it also made him just the sixth man to reach the semifinals at all nine ATP Masters 1000 events. (atptour.com) ### Why does 21 matter so much? Because 21 is the real starting point for all the “29-match streak” talk. You only get to 29 by adding eight more wins from here. Madri(atptour.com) title in Madrid, he would leave Spain at 23 straight. Then Rome would become the next checkpoint. (atptour.com) ### So how many would he need in Rome? Probably five, not six. Rome’s 2026 men’s event runs May 6-17 and uses a 96-player draw, which means the top 32 seeds get first-round byes. Sinner, as world(atptour.com)ome is five match wins: second round, third round, round of 16, quarterfinal, semifinal, final — actually six rounds on paper, but only five wins after the bye? No — count them carefully: second, third, fourth, quarterfinal, semifinal, final. That is six wins. So if Sinner wins Madrid and then wins Rome, he would move from 21 to 29. (atptour.com) ### Why are people focused on Rome specifically? Because it is the next full Masters 1000 stop on the calendar, and because it is home soil. Rome is the cleanest place for the streak math to land on a round number. If Sinner loses in the Madrid semifinal, he would go to Rome on 21 and would need the full six wins there just to get to 27. If he wins one more in Madrid, he arrives on 22 and would need five in Rome for 27. The 29 number only lines up in Rome if he finishes Madrid with the title. That’s the catch. (flashscore.com)king wins in small events. He has already won Indian Wells, Miami and Monte-Carlo this season, after ATP’s own records page noted he had taken all three Masters 1000 events played in 2026 before Madrid. He also came into Madrid chasing a fifth consecutive Masters 1000 title overall, dating back to Paris in 2025. Basically, this is a form run that is colliding with history. (atptour.com) ### What about the field around him? Ar(flashscore.com)lona, so Madrid is hardly free money. But the bigger backdrop is that Sinner’s clay-court momentum looks even more important when Carlos Alcaraz is not looming over every stop in full strength. That shifts the conversation from “can Sinner stay hot?” to “how far can this stretch before Paris?” The streak becomes a way of measuring control. (atptour.com) ### Does 29 mean he breaks (atptour.com)urrent era, but not an all-time ATP record. The point is different. A 29-match streak, if he gets there, would mean he kept winning through Madrid and then basically swept Rome too. On clay, right before Roland Garros, that would be a message to the whole tour. (atptour.com) ### Bottom line The clean version is simple. Sinner is at 21 straight after Madrid’s quarte(atptour.com)ut only with a title run. That’s why this number is suddenly everywhere. (atptour.com)