World number one Novak Djokovic beat defending champion Andy Murray 6-2 3-6 6-3 in the Madrid Open final on Sunday to capture a record 29th Masters crown.
The Serb collected his fifth title of 2016 after winning the Qatar Open, Indian Wells, Miami Open and Australian Open, in which he also defeated Murray in the final.
The Scot, who also lost second place in the world rankings to Roger Federer, knocked out crowd favourite Rafael Nadal in the semi-finals but Djokovic proved a more formidable opponent, breaking him three times in the opening set.
Murray hit back in the second but had no answer in the third as Djokovic repeated his 2011 Madrid Open triumph.
"I started very well and played terrific tennis in the first set," said Djokovic.
"There were a couple of close games in the second set ... and I made some unforced errors and double faults in the game when I dropped my serve. So I fought...very hard."
Djokovic also collected his 64th career title, equalling tennis greats Pete Sampras and Bjorn Borg.
"It's obviously very flattering to be alongside such legends of the sport, players that I looked up to, especially Pete Sampras," he said.
"When I was growing up he was ruling the tennis world. To win as many titles as he did in his career, it's quite amazing."
Murray said his opponent played the better tennis.
"Novak has had a lot of wins against me in the last couple of years unfortunately but he has done some great things and also deserved this win," the Scot added.
"At the end he came up with some big serves and got himself some free points and did well. That's why he's number one just now."
-
Bucks vs Thunder: Nikola Topic makes NBA debut as Milwaukee wins big
-
Shaun White is back at the Olympics but not competing: Here’s why
-
Breezy Johnson engaged at Olympics after emotional finish line proposal
-
Olympics men hockey game: McDavid, Crosby power Canada past Czechia
-
Ex-Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey charged with additional rape counts
-
Chloe Kim set for historic halfpipe gold showdown at Milano Cortina
-
Vladyslav Heraskevych disqualified from Winter Olympics 2026 over helmet controversy
-
Thomas Tuchel set for England contract extension through Euro 2028