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Sinner’s Indian Wells Triumph Leaves No More Mountains to Climb on Hard Courts

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Jannik Sinner has climbed every mountain hard-court tennis has to offer. His first BNP Paribas Open title, sealed with a 7-6(6), 7-6(4) victory over Daniil Medvedev after a fortnight without dropping a set, completed the ascent of the final peak in a collection that includes the Australian Open, US Open, ATP Finals, and all six Masters 1000 titles.
The Italian had identified Indian Wells as the outstanding summit on his hard-court journey, and his approach to the tournament reflected that focus. He was methodical, powerful, and precise throughout, allowing no opponent to threaten his record until Medvedev’s challenge in the final.
Medvedev’s 4-0 lead in the second tiebreak was the steepest climb of Sinner’s fortnight — a moment when the summit appeared briefly further away. But his seven-point comeback was the mountaineer’s equivalent of finding a hidden path and reaching the top with renewed confidence.
The Italian’s serving throughout the final was the bedrock of his victory. Not facing a break point against Medvedev — one of the sport’s finest returners — meant Sinner could control the pace of the match and dictate on his own terms.
Sabalenka’s personal summit was also conquered at Indian Wells, with her 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(6) victory over Rybakina ending four consecutive final defeats against the Kazakh. Her match-point save in the deciding tiebreak and subsequent celebrations represented the summit of a personal and professional journey.

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