Sinner's Golden Slam! 🏆🇮🇹 Tennis History Made!
May 18, 2026 | Author ABR-INSIGHTS News Hub
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📝Summary
Jannik Sinner secured the Golden Masters title, marking him as the second man after Novak Djokovic to conquer all nine ATP Masters 1000 events. The victory, finalized with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Casper Ruud at the Italian Open in Rome, represented the first Italian men’s triumph since Adriano Panatta in 1976. Sinner’s winning streak, extending to 29 matches following a February 19 defeat, culminated in a significant moment for Italian tennis. The atmosphere at the Foro Italico, supporting Sinner, was described as akin to a football match. Alongside Jasmine Paolini’s singles victory, Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori achieved a historic doubles win, and Elina Svitolina claimed the women's title. The event concluded with Adriano Panatta celebrating a trophy returned after fifty years, while Roland Garros remains the sole Grand Slam yet to be won by Sinner.
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JANNIK SINNER ACHIEVES GOLDEN MASTERS TRIUMPH
Jannik Sinner has completed the coveted Golden Masters in tennis to become only the second man after Novak Djokovic to win all nine Masters 1000 events, the biggest tournaments outside the Grand Slams.
THE ITALIAN OPEN VICTORY AND A HISTORICAL MOMENT
Top-ranked Sinner’s 6-4, 6-4 victory over Casper Ruud in Sunday’s final of the Italian Open also made him the first Italian man to win the tournament since Adriano Panatta in 1976. “There’s no better place to complete this set,” Sinner said after winning the title and accomplishing the feat on the red clay of the Foro Italico in Rome in front of jubilant home fans who finally saw the half-century-long wait come to an end. “For an Italian, it’s one of the most special places we play tennis in. To win at least once in my career means a lot to me.”
A LEGACY OF NOVAK DJOKOVIC
Djokovic completed the career set in 2018 in Cincinnati, Ohio, in the United States at the age of 31 and then went on to win each event at least twice. Sinner is 24, and with his only real rival, Carlos Alcaraz, currently sidelined due to a right wrist injury, he is proving hard to beat. “Welcome to the exclusive club, Jannik,” Djokovic wrote on Instagram.
SINNER’S DOMINANT RECORD
Sinner extended his winning streak to 29 matches. He hasn’t lost since being beaten by Jakub Mensik in the Qatar Open quarterfinals on February 19, and he’s now 17-0 on clay this year as he is poised to enter the French Open, which starts on Sunday.
CELEBRATION AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Sinner celebrated calmly as usual, revealing a wide smile when he landed an inside-out forehand on the line on his first championship point, then held his hands over his head in apparent relief. Then he waved to the crowd. Adriano Panatta sitting in the front row. “Adriano, after 50 years, we’ve won back a very important trophy,” Sinner told the 75-year-old Panatta, who participated in the trophy ceremony.
A CROWD-DRIVEN SPECTACLE
Roland Garros is the only Grand Slam that Sinner hasn’t won. He has two Australian Open titles and has won Wimbledon and the US Open once each. Football-style atmosphereSinner’s triumph came – also with Italian President Sergio Mattarella in attendance – after he lost last year’s final in Rome to Alcaraz in his first tournament back after a three-month doping ban. That defeat came a day after Jasmine Paolini became the first Italian woman to win the Rome singles title in 40 years. She also claimed the doubles trophy with Sara Errani.
FAN SUPPORT AND THE “OLE” CHANT
With many of Sinner’s fans dressed in orange – his theme colour, which matches his curly hair – the capacity crowd of 10,500 on Campo Centrale created a football-style atmosphere with chanting and loud cheers for the player who has become far and away Italy’s most popular athlete. After several key points, the crowd erupted into a cheer of “Ole, Ole, Ole, Ole; Sin-ner, Sin-ner.” Then there was more chanting during the trophy presentation.
THE IMPORTANCE OF FEDERATION SUPPORT
Angelo Binaghi, the president of the Italian tennis federation, suggested that even if there was a 25,000-seat centre court in Rome – bigger than the US Open’s Arthur Ashe Stadium, the world’s largest tennis arena – it would have been full. Sinner fans hold an Italian flag with his picture during his final against Ruud.
RESILIENCE AGAINST THE ODDS
No signs of fatigueSinner overcame exhaustion to beat Daniil Medvedev in the semifinals in a rain-delayed match that required two days to finish. But there were no signs of fatigue against the 25th-ranked Ruud, who has been one of the circuit’s top clay-court players for years.
RUUD’S FIGHT AND SINNER’S STRATEGY
Ruud reached two finals at Roland Garros, losing to Rafael Nadal in 2022 and Djokovic in 2023. But the Norwegian wasted an early break and a 2-0 advantage at the start of the first set against Sinner, who quickly broke back and then broke again towards the end of the set with the help of three key drop shots – two of which were so well-placed that Ruud didn’t even run for them.
A VICTORY SEALED
A big backhand winner up the line gave Sinner another break in the opening game of the second set. Sinner improved to 5-0 in his career against Ruud. “What you’re doing this year, it’s hard to describe in words,” Ruud told Sinner during the trophy ceremony. “It’s really an honour to watch you play. … Congratulations for making history.”
A DAY OF ITALIAN TRIUMPHS
Day to remember for ItalyIt was an extra special day for the host nation after Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori became the first Italian duo to win the men’s doubles title in Rome since 1960. Bolelli and Vavassori beat Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos 7-6 (8), 6-7 (3), 10-3.
A MULTI-PLATFORM SPECTACLE
For both the singles and doubles finals, there was a packed crowd watching on a jumbo screen on the statue-lined court of the Nicola Pietrangeli Stadium next to Campo Centrale. Elina Svitolina beat Coco Gauff in the women’s singles title match on Saturday.
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