
Jannik Sinner's ascent has officialy moved from spectacular to historic! The Italian became one of the world's best players in the second half of 2023 and embraced a dominant run in the next two seasons.
The San Candido native compiled a jaw-dropping 73-6 season in 2024 and backed it with a 58-6 campaign this year. Thus, Jannik collected consecutive seasons with an astonishing 90% win rate and wrote history books.
That level of dominance in joined seasons is nearly unheard in the modern game. In fact, only four players in the Open era had ever accomplished that before the Italian, which speaks volumes about his run.
Jimmy Connors stood strong between 1974 and 1976, with Bjorn Borg stealing the spotlight with four brilliant campaigns between 1977 and 1980. A couple of years later, Ivan Lendl joined the party.
Known for a rock-solid game on every surface and in all conditions, the Czech stood above 90% win rate between 1985 and 1987. We had to wait until Roger Federer to extend the chart.
The Swiss star stormed over the rest of the field between 2004 and 2006, with Rafael Nadal emerging as his only serious rival. Now, Sinner's name stands on the legendary list.
As we can see, tennis giants like Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic never managed to achieve this particular statistical milestone. They had many impressive seasons, but they never accomplished this.
Jannik collected a 131-12 record in 2024 and 2025, with seven defeats coming against Carlos Alcaraz. His dominant stretch spanned surfaces, continents, pressure moments and conditions.
With his incredible consistency, Sinner has proved that his level belongs to the highest tier the sport has ever seen, and this list confirms that. The Italian has been dominanting with commanding serves, relentless baseline depth and a mental calm when it matters the most.
Roger Federer's run has long been considered the gold standard of modern consistency. Now, Jannik just wrote the first comparable chapter since then, with likely more to come in 2026.
His numbers already place him on a track reserved for tennis giants, and he may only be getting started.