Jannik Sinner won the Indian Wells title on Sunday, beating Daniil Medvedev 7-6(6), 7-6(4) in a tightly contested final that confirmed his growing hold on the biggest hard-court events in men’s tennis. The Italian did not drop a set all tournament and closed the match with a remarkable comeback in the second-set tiebreak after trailing 4-0.
The final was not flashy in the usual desert-showcase sense, but it was high quality from the opening games. Both players served well, both defended stubbornly, and neither gave much away from the baseline. Sinner was simply steadier at the moments that mattered most. He edged the first-set tiebreak, then repeated the feat in the second after Medvedev appeared to have created a path back into the match.
For long stretches, Medvedev made life uncomfortable. The Russian had arrived in the final fresh off a straight-sets semifinal win over Carlos Alcaraz, ending the world No. 1’s unbeaten start to the 2026 season and his bid for a third straight Indian Wells crown. That result gave the championship match added weight, but Sinner handled it with the calm, disciplined tennis that has become his trademark.
Sinner’s numbers in the final reflected just how efficient he was. He struck 28 winners, served 10 aces and won all eight of his approaches to the net, blending clean aggression with the kind of controlled shot selection that rarely let Medvedev turn the match fully in his favor. When the second-set tiebreak slipped away early, Sinner reset immediately and ripped off seven straight points to finish the job in straight sets.
The title was his first at Indian Wells, but it also carried broader significance. With the win, Sinner became just the third man to complete the set of all six ATP Masters 1000 titles played on hard courts, joining Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer. It was another milestone for a player who has already built one of the strongest hard-court résumés in the sport.
Sinner later said his preparation in the California desert played a role. He arrived early to adjust to the dry heat and court conditions, a detail that mattered on a day when temperatures pushed well above 30 degrees Celsius. The extra time appeared to pay off, as he looked physically sharp and composed through the most demanding stretches of the match.
For Medvedev, it was another frustrating final in Indian Wells after a strong week. For Sinner, it was one more sign that the sport’s biggest hard-court stages are increasingly becoming his territory.
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