Posted in

Rome Open ATP Final Round-up

Rome Open ATP Final Round-up
Jannik Sinner defeated Casper Ruud 6-4, 6-4 in the Rome Open Final to secure the title after a match defined by early serving instability and long baseline exchanges. The win moves Sinner closer to completing the Career Golden Masters, having now won all nine Masters 1000 titles at least once, with Rome the missing piece, while extending his Masters winning streak to 33 matches.

The final shifted as Sinner improved first-serve consistency, reducing Ruud’s ability to extend rallies. The result reinforces his position at world No. 1 heading into Roland Garros, adding another Masters title to a dominant stretch on the circuit.

Early baseline exchanges expose Sinner’s first-serve instability

The opening phase of the match was defined by a lack of free points on Sinner’s serve, with only a limited number of his early points coming directly from first-serve dominance. This created longer baseline exchanges, allowing Ruud to engage more consistently in neutral rallies and establish early return rhythm.

Casper Ruud capitalised on that structure by breaking first after controlling extended exchanges from the baseline and targeting Sinner’s second serve. However, Sinner responded quickly with a break of his own, restoring parity as both players settled into a pattern of service games decided largely through rally construction rather than serve penetration.

From 2-2 onwards, neither player was able to consistently generate short points, with Ruud maintaining strong cross-court backhand exchanges to neutralise Sinner’s forehand acceleration. The set remained balanced until 4-4, when Sinner generated sustained pressure on return and converted a break opportunity to take the lead, closing the opener 6-4.

First-serve improvement shifts momentum as Sinner closes in straight sets

Jannik Sinner started the second set with an immediate break, winning a long baseline rally before finishing with a backhand down-the-line winner to establish early control. From 1-0, he consolidated the advantage with a composed service hold, maintaining pressure through steady first-serve execution and limiting Ruud’s ability to extend return games.

Ruud briefly stabilized the set, holding serve at 2-1 after saving a break point in a tight game, but he remained largely unable to create sustained pressure on return. Sinner continued to consolidate, holding comfortably for 3-1 and 4-2 while dropping very few points behind serve, as Ruud increasingly struggled to disrupt his rhythm from the baseline.

The Norwegian responded with a solid hold at 3-2, using shorter point construction to stay within range, but Sinner maintained the break advantage through consistent service games. Even when Ruud held at 4-3 and 5-4 to stay alive in the set, he generated no meaningful break opportunities, forcing Sinner to serve out the match.

Serving for the title at 5-4, Sinner closed the Rome Open Final 6-4, 6-4 with a controlled final game, sealing the victory after maintaining first-serve stability and neutralising Ruud’s return pressure throughout the closing stages of the set.