The statistics from Jannik Sinner’s Indian Wells title campaign tell the story of a player in absolute control of his game. Zero sets dropped across the entire fortnight. Zero break points conceded in the final. A comeback from 4-0 down in the second tiebreak to beat Daniil Medvedev 7-6(6), 7-6(4).
Sinner had entered the tournament knowing that Indian Wells was the one major hard-court title still missing from his collection. He approached the fortnight with a mission, and his numbers reflected the focused, clinical mindset he brought to every match.
Medvedev was the biggest test, arriving in the final with momentum from his semi-final win over Sinner at a recent tournament. The Russian’s consistent pressure pushed the Italian to two tiebreaks, and the 4-0 lead in the second proved a genuine crisis point.
Sinner’s response was immediate and decisive. Seven consecutive points to win the tiebreak and the match — statistics that seem almost impossible in the context of a championship final against one of the sport’s finest competitors.
The women’s final offered its own remarkable numbers: Sabalenka’s win over Rybakina came after the Belarusian had lost four straight finals against the Kazakh. In the deciding tiebreak, she saved a match point before winning on her first opportunity at 7-6. Numbers that tell the story of an extraordinary personal triumph.
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No Dropped Set, No Break Points: Sinner’s Indian Wells Campaign by the Numbers
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