Sinner Cruises Past Moller, Extends Masters 1000 Streak to 24

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner defeated Denmark's Elmer Moller 6-2, 6-3 in the Madrid Open third round, extending his ATP Masters 1000 winning streak to 24 matches. The Italian dominated from the start, breaking serve multiple times to seal the match in 77 minutes. Sinner now needs four more wins to become the first player to win five consecutive Masters 1000 titles. He will face either Cameron Norrie or Thiago Agustin Tirante in the fourth round.

Key Points: Sinner Wins 24th Straight Masters 1000 Match in Madrid

  • Sinner defeats Moller 6-2, 6-3 in 77 minutes
  • Extends Masters 1000 winning streak to 24 matches
  • Sinner needs four more wins for fifth straight Masters title
  • Moller required medical timeout for abdominal issue
2 min read

Madrid Open: Sinner cruises into fourth round, extends Masters 1000 streak

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner beats Elmer Moller 6-2, 6-3 to reach Madrid Open fourth round, extending his ATP Masters 1000 winning streak to 24 matches.

"I tried to stay calm and serve well in important moments. I think that was the key today. - Jannik Sinner"

Madrid, April 26

World No. 1 Jannik Sinner delivered another clinical performance to move into the fourth round of the Madrid Open ATP Masters 1000 event, brushing aside Denmark's Elmer Moller in straight sets on Sunday.

Taking on the 22-year-old for the first time, Sinner showed his class and composure in a 6-2, 6-3 victory that lasted just 77 minutes at the Manolo Santana Stadium. The result extended his remarkable winning run in ATP Masters 1000 events to 24 matches, placing him among the longest streaks recorded in the series.

Moller, ranked No. 169 and playing his maiden match against a top-10 opponent, found himself under immediate pressure as Sinner dictated play from the outset. After a brief exchange of games early in the first set, the Italian surged ahead by reeling off four consecutive games. Although Moller managed to break serve once, Sinner responded swiftly to wrap up the opener.

The Dane showed resilience despite requiring a medical timeout late in the first set due to an abdominal concern, and he raised his level in the second set, particularly with his backhand. However, a pair of double faults at a crucial stage handed Sinner the decisive break, which the top seed converted with authority to seal the match.

Reflecting on his approach, Sinner said, "I tried to stay calm and serve well in important moments. I think that was the key today. There was not a lot of rhythm, so I tried to stay quite compact. Let's see what's coming in the next round."

The Italian has now compiled a 26-2 record this season and is edging closer to a historic milestone, needing four more wins to become the first player to win five successive Masters 1000 titles, having already triumphed in Paris, Indian Wells, Miami, and Monte Carlo.

Sinner will next face either Cameron Norrie or Thiago Agustin Tirante in the fourth round.

Elsewhere, fellow Italian Lorenzo Musetti advanced with a 6-4, 7-5 win over Tallon Griekspoor. He will next meet Jiri Lehecka, who eased past Alex Michelsen in straight sets.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Honestly, I'm more impressed by Elmer Moller's fight despite the injury. Sinner was clinical, no doubt, but Moller showed real heart playing his first match against a top-10 opponent. These lower-ranked players are the real warriors of the tour. šŸ™Œ
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Michael C
Sinner's consistency is remarkable. Five straight Masters 1000 titles? That would be unprecedented. But let's not get ahead of ourselves—Alcaraz, Djokovic, and others are lurking. The Madrid crowd might not be fully behind the Italian either. Still, he's the man to beat right now.
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Kavya N
Sinner playing like a boss! šŸ˜Ž But I wish more Indian players were making waves in these tournaments. We have so much talent, but the infrastructure and support just aren't there yet. Sumit Nagal is doing well, but we need more. Tennis needs to grow in India.
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Rohit P
I keep seeing these "historic" stats about Sinner, but let's be real—the Masters 1000 level has been inconsistent this year. Some top players are missing or injured. Not taking anything away from Sinner, he's world No. 1 for a reason. Just saying context matters. šŸ¤·ā€ā™‚ļø
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Sarah B
Sinner's composure is so underrated. He doesn't get rattled, even when the match has weird rhythm breaks. That quote about staying "compact" is peak champion mindset. He's maturing so fast. And Lorenzo Musetti also quietly advancing—Italian tennis is in a golden era! šŸ‡®šŸ‡¹

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