2006 Italian Open – Men's singles

Defending champion Rafael Nadal defeated Roger Federer in the final, 6–7(0–7), 7–6(7–5), 6–4, 2–6, 7–6(7–5) to win the men's singles tennis title at the 2006 Italian Open.

The final
Rafael Nadal recovered from the brink of defeat against Roger Federer to capture the Rome Masters and equal the record for consecutive wins on clay. Nadal came back from 1–4 down and saved two match points in the final set before triumphing 6–7(0–7), 7–6(7–5), 6–4, 2–6, 7–6(7–5).

The win, which took over five hours, took Nadal to 53 straight wins on clay, matching Guillermo Vilas' record. It also put the 19-year-old level with Björn Borg on 16 titles won as a teenager.

Federer, who had beaten Nadal only once in five attempts before the Rome Masters, started well, clinching a high-quality first set after playing a near-perfect tiebreak. And the world number one was on top for most of the second set but Nadal's trademark battling qualities kept him in it and out of the blue, he somehow earned a set point at 5–4. The teenager was unable to take that one but edged another tiebreak to draw level.

The momentum was by now with Nadal and he looked to have made a decisive move when a break at 2–2 gave him the third set. He had chances to break early in the fourth set but the Spaniard let his struggling opponent off the hook and Federer made him pay. The top seed raced through the fourth set and took control of the decider by taking a 4–1 lead. The Rome crowd, including Prince Albert of Monaco and Omar Sharif, looked on in disbelief as first Nadal levelled at 4–4 then fought off Federer again at 5–6. Nadal's double fault, the first of the match from either player, helped Federer earn two match points but the world number one's usually reliable forehand failed him on both occasions and the Spaniard survived.

Federer still had chances to win in the tiebreak which he led 5–3, in particular when he mishit a forehand which would have given him a 6–3 lead. However, Nadal underlined his talent on the dirt by clinching the tiebreaker and wrapping up his fifth win in six attempts over Federer.

Seeds
A champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. • # Roger Federer (final)

• # 🇪🇸 Rafael Nadal (champion)

• # Ivan Ljubičić (first round)

• # 🇦🇷 David Nalbandian (semifinals)

• # 🇺🇸 Andy Roddick (quarterfinals)

• # 🇷🇺 Nikolay Davydenko (third round)

• # 🇺🇸 James Blake (first round)

• # 🇦🇷 Gastón Gaudio (first round)

• # 🇦🇷 Guillermo Coria (first round)

• # Fernando González (quarterfinals)

• # 🇪🇸 David Ferrer (first round)

• # 🇪🇸 Tommy Robredo (first round)

• # 🇩🇪 Nicolas Kiefer (second round)

• # 🇨🇿 Radek Štěpánek (third round)

• # 🇸🇪 Thomas Johansson (second round)

• # 🇺🇸 Robby Ginepri (second round)

Seeds
• # 🇪🇸 Nicolás Almagro (qualified)

• # 🇪🇸 Alberto Martín (qualified)

• # Novak Djokovic (qualifying competition)

• # 🇸🇪 Jonas Björkman (first round)

• # Wesley Moodie (first round)

• # 🇺🇸 Vincent Spadea (first round)

• # 🇪🇸 Fernando Vicente (qualified)

• # 🇧🇷 Flávio Saretta (qualifying competition)

• # 🇪🇸 Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo (qualified)

• # 🇷🇴 Răzvan Sabău (first round)

• # 🇧🇪 Dick Norman (qualifying competition)

• # 🇷🇺 Igor Kunitsyn (qualifying competition)

• # 🇦🇷 Juan Mónaco (qualified)

• # 🇦🇹 Oliver Marach (qualifying competition)

• # 🇪🇸 Guillermo García-López (first round)

• # Juan Antonio Marín (qualifying competition)

Qualifiers
• # 🇪🇸 Nicolás Almagro

• # 🇪🇸 Alberto Martín

• # 🇮🇹 Fabio Fognini

• # 🇮🇹 Stefano Galvani

• # 🇷🇺 Teymuraz Gabashvili

• # 🇦🇷 Juan Mónaco

• # 🇪🇸 Fernando Vicente

• # 🇪🇸 Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo