Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic are among the high-profile names taking on the Italian Open, which returns to Rome this week.
Sinner enters the ATP Masters 1000 tournament on the back of his success at the Madrid Open, where he made history after his final win over Alexander Zverev.
The Italian is the only man to win five successive ATP Masters 1000 tournaments, with Martina Navratilova praising Sinner for his stunning achievement.
He’ll now have home support on his side at the Italian Open, where world number one Sinner could win yet another major tournament.
And the top seed has now learned his fate for the event after the draw was confirmed, with another trophy very much on the cards.
When does Jannik Sinner next lose a tennis match? 👀
Jannik Sinner learns potential Italian Open final route
Sinner has received a bye in the first round of the Italian Open, with Sebastian Ofner and Alex Michelsen potentially awaiting him in round two.
Alexei Popyrin, Jakub Mensik or fellow Italian Matteo Berrettini are his possible third round opponents, with Arthur Fils, Frances Tiafoe and compatriot Lorenzo Sonego representing possible fourth round ties.
Sinner could then meet either Andrey Rublev or Ben Shelton in the quarterfinals, followed by a possible semifinal against Felix Auger-Aliassime, Daniil Medvedev or Joao Fonseca.
And should he make it all the way to the final, Lorenzo Musetti, Djokovic or Zverev could await on the other side of the net.

Novak Djokovic faces possible Rome final vs Jannik Sinner
Much less busy than Sinner this season, Djokovic is back on the ATP Tour for the first time since Indian Wells in March.
The third seed also has an opening-round bye in Rome, with Marton Fucsovics or a qualifier following in round two for the 24-time Grand Slam champion.
Ugo Humbert or Fabian Marozsan are possible third round ties, followed by Karen Khachanov, Arthur Rinderknech or Botic van de Zandschulp in round four.
Djokovic could then meet Lorenzo Musetti, Casper Ruud or Jiri Lehecka in the quarterfinals, before a possible semifinal with Zverev, Alex de Minaur or Alexander Bublik.
And Madrid Open champion Sinner represents a potential final opponent, alongside Auger-Aliassime, Shelton and Medvedev.

Both Sinner and Djokovic certainly have intriguing draws, with the duo using the tournament as a warm-up for the French Open.
The Serbian can become the all-time Grand Slam title-leader should he lift the trophy in Paris, where the Italian can complete the Grand Slam.

