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Tennis-Sinner beats Lehecka in rain-hit Miami final to capture ‘Sunshine Double’

By Thomson Reuters Mar 29, 2026 | 6:59 PM

March 29 (Reuters) – Jannik Sinner beat Czech Jiri Lehecka 6-4 6-4 in a rain-hit Miami Open final on Sunday to become the first man to complete the coveted ‘Sunshine Double’ without dropping a set.

The ​Italian world number two won 92% of his first-serve points and ‌saved all three break points he faced en route to a victory that extended his string of Masters 1000 matches without dropping a set to 17.

“We did a lot of work to be in this position, so I’m really, really happy, and I’m also ‌happy ​to go back home now,” Sinner said after the ⁠match.

“Making here the Sunshine ⁠Double here for the first time, it’s incredible. It’s something I would have never thought, because it’s also difficult to achieve, and yeah, we made it somehow, so I’m very happy.”

Sinner, who played around with a ​soccer ball ahead of a match that was delayed by about 90 minutes due to rain, broke early for a 3-1 lead and then leaned ⁠on his serve to close out the ⁠opening set with a hold at love.

The rain returned during ​the opening game of the second set, forcing players off the court for ​about 90 minutes, during which Sinner again kept loose with a ‌soccer ball that he passed around with members of his team.

World number 22 Lehecka, playing in his first Masters 1000 final, fought off five break points over a pair of service games in the second set followed by ⁠a hold at love to go 4-3 up before Sinner took over.

Sinner made good on his sixth break point opportunity of the second set to pull ahead ⁠5-4 and then closed ‌it out on his serve when he sent a forehand ⁠volley to the open court on his first championship ​point.

Sinner ‌is the first man since Roger Federer in 2017 ​to win the ⁠Indian Wells and Miami titles back-to-back, a feat known as the ‘Sunshine Double’ given the tournaments’ respective locations in California and Florida.

By doing so, Sinner joins a club that, in addition to Federer, also includes Novak Djokovic, Andre Agassi, Marcelo Rios, Pete Sampras, Michael Chang and Jim Courier.

(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; ​Editing by Stephen Coates)