A long wait ends
Alexander Zverev is now a Grand Slam champion. The German defeated Italy’s Flavio Cobolli in five sets in the French Open final, winning 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7 (5-7), 6-1 on Court Philippe-Chatrier.
It was his first major title after three earlier final losses. For a player long defined by near-misses, the result changed everything in one afternoon.
What made the difference
Zverev’s talent was never in question. The issue was whether he could hold firm when the match tightened. On Sunday, he finally did.
- The serve settled down. In past losses, double faults and nerves opened the door. This time, Zverev stayed steady in the biggest moments and finished the fifth set with authority.
- The forehand became more reliable. With a dependable first serve, he controlled rallies more often and attacked from the baseline instead of waiting too long.
- The pressure did not break him. Cobolli kept pushing and twice forced Zverev into uncomfortable sets, but Zverev answered in the final set instead of backing away.
The draw also helped
Grand Slam runs are never just about one match. They are also shaped by who is still standing. Carlos Alcaraz withdrew with a wrist injury, Jannik Sinner lost early, and Novak Djokovic fell in the third round to teenager Joao Fonseca.
Zverev still had to beat the players in front of him, and he did. He handled Jakub Mensik in the semifinals, while Cobolli reached the final after taking out Felix Auger-Aliassime in the quarter-finals.
Four finals, one breakthrough
The result carried the weight of years of disappointment. Zverev’s earlier losses built a pattern that he had to live with and then finally overcome.
- 2020 US Open: lost to Dominic Thiem in five sets
- 2024 French Open: lost to Carlos Alcaraz
- 2025 Australian Open: lost to Jannik Sinner
- 2026 French Open: beat Flavio Cobolli in five sets
After the match, Zverev spoke about the injuries, heartbreak, and defeats that had shaped the road to this moment. The tears on clay said enough without needing much explanation.
Why this title changes his career
This win does more than add a trophy. It removes the biggest question mark around Zverev’s career: whether he could close out the sport’s biggest events. He now has that answer.
He still carries a complicated public profile. Two former partners have accused him of domestic abuse, and he has denied wrongdoing. An ATP investigation into the first allegations ended in 2023 for lack of sufficient evidence. A later court case in 2024 ended in a settlement, with Zverev paying 200,000 euros; BBC Sport reported that this was not a verdict or a finding of guilt.
On court, though, the meaning is simpler. The first major is always the hardest, and once it arrives, the pressure changes shape. Zverev no longer walks into every Slam carrying the same burden.
What comes next
Wimbledon is next, and grass should suit his serve. That alone makes him dangerous on a faster surface. If this win frees him mentally, there may be more deep runs ahead.
Zverev said it plainly after the final: “No matter what happens, I will always be a Grand Slam champion.” For him, that sentence is now permanent.

