Coming into Indian Wells, there was mild speculation that Jannik Sinner had been slightly below his best in the opening weeks of 2026. By the end of a fortnight in California, those conversations had been firmly silenced. His first Indian Wells title, secured with a 7-6(6), 7-6(4) victory over Daniil Medvedev, was the response of a champion.
Sinner had not dropped a set throughout the tournament, marching through the draw with the authority of a player operating at the top of his game. His serving was outstanding throughout, and in the final, not facing a break point against Medvedev was a remarkable achievement.
Medvedev was the most dangerous opponent Sinner faced during the fortnight, bringing the same aggressive, flat-hitting game that had already beaten the Italian in a recent semi-final. A 4-0 lead in the second tiebreak was the closest he came to forcing a third set, but Sinner’s seven-point response was definitive.
The victory completed Sinner’s set of every major hard-court title. The Australian Open, US Open, ATP Finals, and all six Masters 1000 events — all won before the age of 25 — constitute one of the finest individual collections in the history of the sport.
Women’s world number one Sabalenka also claimed an important victory, defeating Rybakina 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(6) in the women’s final. Her match-point save in the deciding tiebreak and subsequent celebrations with her fiance and new puppy made for one of the tournament’s most joyful moments.
