Arthur Fils is riding the wave of his career. The Frenchman dispatched Jiri Lehecka 6-3, 6-4 in the Madrid Open quarterfinals to reach his maiden Masters 1000 semifinal at just twenty-one years of age.
Fils dominated from start to finish. A break of serve in the third game of the opening set put him in command, and the Frenchman never looked back. Ten winners, two aces, and not a single break point conceded across seventy-five minutes of clinical tennis. Lehecka, who had impressed through three earlier rounds, found no answers to Fils' relentless baseline game.
The second set followed the same script. Fils broke for 3-2 with a razor-sharp backhand pass, then served out the match at 5-4 with an ace down the center. The crowd inside the Caja Magica rose to acknowledge the performance.
Fresh off his Barcelona title just four days ago, Fils has assembled a remarkable run on clay. Two consecutive finals, one trophy, and now a Masters 1000 semifinal to cap an extraordinary stretch. The Frenchman hasn't shown this level of consistency since his breakthrough in Tokyo at the end of 2025.
Next up is Jannik Sinner, the world number one who cruised past Rafael Jodar in his own quarterfinal. The challenge is immense — Sinner hasn't lost since February and brings a twenty-one match winning streak into the clash. But Fils has demonstrated this week that his game translates at the very highest level. On the clay of , anything remains possible.
