Alexander Zverev savours a ‘happy end’ at French Open after grand slam heartache

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As the man who had condemned him to his first bruising grand slam final loss watched from the stands, Alexander Zverev finally overcame his demons, and the spirited but inexperienced Flavio Cobolli, to claim a first major title, winning 6-1 4-6 6-4 6-7(5-7) 6-1 at Roland-Garros.

Dominic Thiem was responsible for his five-set loss in the US Open showpiece six years ago and the scar tissue from that defeat, and two more since in slam finals, has haunted Zverev, the 2020 Olympic champion and often dubbed the best male player to have never won a slam.

He was the overwhelming favourite for the title in the absence of Carlos Alcaraz and after the exits of Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic, against the world No 14 Cobolli, the only top-25 player he has faced all fortnight and a debutant on this stage.

Those demons were evident in a nervy and generally low-quality showing on Court Philippe-Chatrier on Sunday, but Zverev ultimately managed to conquer his own mind and break Cobolli’s resistance – with a significant helping hand from Cobolli himself in a four-and-a-quarter-hour final decided more on errors and wobbles than anything else. It was a final which if Zverev had not won would suggest that he never would.

The 29-year-old said: “This court is so special to me in so many ways. I have had the best moments of my life in this court and I have had the worst moment of my life on this court.

“I was laid in that corner four years ago with seven broken ligaments and two fractured bones [in a horrific injury suffered in the 2022 semi-finals]. I lost a Grand Slam final here two years ago. But now, finally, it is a happy ending.”

“It’s not easy for me to talk right now,” 24-year-old Cobolli said afterwards with a sad smile. “It’s been an honour to share the court with you today. I’m happy for you but I’m also sad because I was close and I feel it… so now you’ve achieved your dream let me win it next time.”

The danger for the rest of the tour is that now Zverev has overcome what was always his most significant opponent, his own mind, there may be more slam titles to come.

Alexander Zverev beat Flavio Cobolli in five sets to win the French Open title (Reuters)

Nerves in a first grand slam final are inevitable and Zverev, with his experience of this stage, was always likely to settle quicker. He ensured the pressure was immediately on Cobolli as the German opted to receive, with an early double fault greeted by a round of sympathetic applause which probably did not help the Italian’s nerves.

It set the tone for the rest of the set: he struggled to string a run of points together, with his backhand wing wilting under the pressure and his drop shots falling miserably short of the net. A usually charismatic presence, he was timid and passive.

A stunning forehand winner by Zverev, whose destructive serve – he leads the tour for first serves in over the last year – and groundstrokes were near-untouchable, sealed a 6-1 first set in 35 minutes. Unsurprisingly Cobolli left the court, as the speakers, perhaps distastefully, played Lenny Kravitz’s ‘It Ain’t Over Til It’s Over’.

As he re-emerged Cobolli opted for a different tactic, trying to energise himself and the crowd, shouting to himself with every point won. At 3-3 Zverev, who had only dropped one point on serve until the seventh game, suddenly wobbled. The Italian finally earned a first break point 63 minutes into the match, and Zverev double faulted twice – for the first time in the match – and hammered a forehand wide to concede a first break.

Zverev appeared in disbelief as he finally won a major title (AP)

An increasingly confident Cobolli served out the set, and having recovered from his first-set jitters he ran Zverev close in the third, serve-and-volleying and keeping points short – until he conceded a cheap break under little pressure, serving at 5-4 down.

It put Zverev only a set away from the holy grail. And as at so many points in his career, when so close to the title, he began to shrink into himself, his forehand and second serve yips familiar weaknesses.

A terrible service game including two double faults handed over an early break. After another pair of breaks traded Zverev became listless, standing with his hands on his hips in disappointment after thumping a poor backhand well wide at 30-30 on the Italian’s serve, with Cobolli escaping to lead 5-3. It is an image crowds have seen many times before.

Zverev was lucky to avoid a time violation for obvious mind games as he ambled slowly to the baseline for Cobolli to serve for the set, and looked to be suffering from cramp, either due to understandable nerves or low blood sugar levels (the German has been open about managing tennis with Type 1 diabetes).

He was handed a violation in the next game after breaking again, having received some sort of remedy from his team, and held to 15 to put the pressure back on Cobolli. The Italian responded with his first hold to love of the entire match to set up the biggest tie-break of either player’s life.

The second seed dropped to the ground as Cobolli’s overhead smash went wide (AP)

Cobolli opened it with possibly the point of the match, a superb backhand winner which just kissed the baseline, before immediately netting on his own serve. Yet another unlucky net cord handed over the mini-break, but he restored parity with a Zverev error and another big serve when it mattered.

Zverev produced a sixth double fault of the match to drop from 3-1 up to 5-3 down, and although he won the next point, Cobolli bamboozled him with a brave drop shot to earn two set points. A terrible overhead smash indicated, if proof were needed, that the nerves were wreaking havoc on both sides of the net. But he whipped a forehand beyond the German’s reach to condemn him to a decider. “I just closed my eyes,” Cobolli said later with a smile, of those two shots. “That sometimes helps.”

Cobolli had had three days off before the final after compatriot Matteo Arnaldi withdrew from their semi-final but as the clock ticked towards the four-hour mark the energy that had propelled him into the decider deserted him. He told press later: “I felt cramps on my calf. I tried all my best on the changeover, but my calf was gone. At the end after the second game also my quad, and I felt completely tired. My body leave me on the court.”

He was broken twice before calling the trainer for cramp, and could not take his chances as Zverev flailed again at 3-0, the latter saving two break points to hold for a 4-0.

After a dire opening set Cobolli fought back, before his resistance broke in the decider (AP)

At 5-1 down the light went out of Cobolli’s eyes and a double fault brought up three championship points for the second seed.

One was saved by a net cord, but Cobolli flung an overhead smash miles wide – a fitting last shot, in many ways – to belatedly bring an end to Zverev’s nearly-man status.

He will not be a universally popular winner. His career has been overshadowed by accusations of emotional and physical abuse made by two former girlfriends, Olga Sharypova and Brenda Patea, the latter of whom is the mother of his daughter. Zverev has always strenuously denied all allegations.

He was fined £400,000 by a German court in 2023 for committing bodily harm against Patea, although his appeal against the penalty order did not result in a decision in court, with a settlement reached the following June. The accusations, and the ATP Tour’s lack of leadership or policy on the subject of domestic violence and abuse, has made following Zverev’s continued success difficult for many observers.

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