Mutua Madrid Open finals this weekend

- Jannik Sinner and Marta Kostyuk won the 2026 Mutua Madrid Open singles titles, with Sinner crushing Alexander Zverev and Kostyuk beating Mirra Andreeva. - Sinner’s 6-1, 6-2 final made him the first man to win five straight Masters 1000 titles; doubles finals started at 14:00, singles at 17:00. - Madrid matters because it sits right before Rome and Roland Garros — and this year it sharpened the clay-court pecking order fast.

The Madrid Open is over now — and the “finals this weekend” angle needs one big correction. The championship matches were played on Saturday, May 2, and Sunday, May 3, 2026, not the coming weekend. That matters because the actual news is no longer the schedule. It’s the result — and the result was a pretty loud statement from Jannik Sinner on the men’s side and a breakthrough run from Marta Kostyuk on the women’s side. (mutuamadridopen.com) ### Who actually won Madrid? Marta Kostyuk won the women’s singles title by beating Mirra Andreeva 6-3, 7-5 in the final. A day later, Jannik Sinner flattened Alexander Zverev 6-1, 6-2 in the men’s final inside Manolo Santana Stadium at Caja Mágica. Those are not squeaky, survive-and-advance scorelines. They’re control-from-the-start scorelines. (wtatennis.com) ### Why is Sinner’s win the bigger headline? Because the score was brutal and the milestone was historic. Sinner’s Madrid title made him the first man to win five consecutive ATP Masters 1000 events. That is absurdly hard to do, especially on a surface where points stretch and matches can get messy fast. Instead, he made the final look clean, quick, and almost unfair. (atptour.com) ### What did the finals weekend schedule look like? The tournament changed the finals timetable before championship weekend. Doubles finals were moved to 14:00 local time, and singles finals to 17:00 local time, with updated tickets reissued for those sessions. So if someone still has an older schedule floating around, that’s the catch — the official plan changed. (mutuamadridopen.com) ### What happened in doubles? Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend won the women’s doubles title by beating Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider 7-6(2), 6-2. The WTA’s Madrid overview framed it as their third straight WTA 1000 crown, which tells you this was not a random hot week. This pair is becoming one of the tour’s real constants. (wtatennis.com) ### Why does Kostyuk’s title matter? Because Madrid is not a small stop and Andreeva is not an easy final. Winning a WTA 1000 on clay in early May changes how people read the rest of your spring. It pushes Kostyuk from dangerous name to real contender territory as the tour heads toward Rome and then Roland Garros. (wtatennis.com)it sits in the most revealing part of the clay swing. The ATP lists the event from April 22 to May 3, while the full combined tournament at Caja Mágica ran from April 20 to May 3. By this point, players have enough matches on clay for form to be real, not just noise. (atptour.com)re would you have watched? For the men’s final, ATP’s broadcaster list had Tennis Channel as the U.S. outlet. That’s useful mostly as cleanup now, since the match has already been played — but it helps explain where the final was carried for American viewers. (atptour.com)clarified the board. Sinner looks like the man to beat on the ATP side, Kostyuk grabbed the biggest clay title of her career, and the road to Paris suddenly looks a lot less fuzzy.

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