Game, Set, Match: Carlos Alcaraz beats Alexander Zverev to win first French Open (2024)

Carlos Alcaraz beat Alexander Zverev in the French Open final at Roland Garros 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2on Sunday.

The No 3 seed prevailed over the No 4 seed in a jittery and tense display from both players. The match oscillated violently before, as against Jannik Sinner in the semifinal, Alcaraz found his shotmaking and trusted his deadliness to seize control and win.

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It is his first French Open title and a third Grand Slam title on three different surfaces by the age of 21.

The Athletic’s writers, Charlie Eccleshare and Matt Futterman, analyze the final and what it means for tennis.

A fight for middle ground in the opening exchanges

In the first set, the two players were winning a similar number of points when the rallies were up to four shorts or longer than nine — the difference was in the middle, in rallies of between five and eight shots. Alcaraz dominated this metric in the first set, using his greater variety of speed, spin and, particularly, height to either bait Zverev into mistakes or to create simple finishing shots that kept the rallies shorter than they might have been.

But in the second set, Zverev’s impressive durability really kicked in and he completely flipped things, taking 14 of 20 points that were five-to-eight-shot rallies. In a match that from the second set onwards was an excruciating washing machine of nerves, this was one of the only clear indications throughout of who was dictating the match. Zverev was even able to ride the momentum of the second set into the third, in which, despite the fluctuating scoreline, he was much the better player.

Charlie Eccleshare

Alcaraz figures out winning ugly

Three different Grand Slam titles. Three different surfaces. Three completely different matches.

It’s a safe bet that no one would have ever thought to have put “winning ugly” and Carlos Alcaraz in the same sentence, but that is what unfolded on Sunday in Paris. For long stretches, Alcaraz’s game was downright sloppy and unreliable. He sprayed and framed his forehands. He resorted to moonballs on his backhand. He struggled to hold his serve at what looked like the pivot point in the third set when he was up 5-2 and had seemingly cracked Alexander Zverev’s resolve by breaking him to love after previously losing 14 points in a row on the German’s serve.

This was nothing like the highlight-reel performance he produced in the finals of the U.S. Open in 2022 or the steely nerves he showed during last year’s Wimbledon final, a five-set thriller that dethroned Novak Djokovic.

His comeback on Sunday relied as much on Zverev’s serve reverting to its late-match wobbliness and his inability to close points at the net. The key break of serve in the second set had a double fault and two blown volleys that gave the game to Alcaraz.

Even after that, Alcaraz sent a forehand long, sliced another one into the net and sent a third wide to give Zverev a second life.

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Alcaraz’s triumphs often send people walking to the exits raving about scintillating running forehand winners. And point-saving scrambles. That wasn’t what Sunday was about.

For Alcaraz, it was about survival.

Matt Futterman

Can Zverev iron out the fluctuations in his serve and volley?

The serve has defined much of Zverev’s career. How can it fluctuate from being a formidable weapon to a complete liability? How can it be that a player who is 6ft 6in (198cm) can sometimes look so nervy when doing something that should come so naturally? And how much is this a mental barrier?

Like in the 2020 U.S. Open final when he served like a club player down the stretch, on Sunday the full range of motion was on show, seemingly leaving nobody, least of all Zverev, able to find an answer.

Zverev was broken twice in the first set, but he only hit two double faults, both in the first game of the match. After that, he locked down in the second and didn’t face a break point. He continued that momentum into the third and, when serving down 2-3, he was on a run of three straight love holds and 14 points in a row on serve.

Game, Set, Match: Carlos Alcaraz beats Alexander Zverev to win first French Open (2)

Alexander Zverev’s serve has been superb all tournament, but it faltered when he needed it most (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

At which point he promptly got broken to love. Old demons appeared to be resurfacing.

Instead, he controlled them. Zverev recovered to hold his next three service games, going on to win the third set and looking like he had conquered the issue… before losing all three in the fourth to give up the set 6-1 and surrendering an early break in the fifth to make it four service breaks out of five and effectively concede the match. A fifth break in the seventh game rubbed things in a little more.

But in the fifth set, it wasn’t the serve. He hit two wonderful first serves and came in behind them intelligently. The first time, he poked a backhand volley long. The second, he hit a duff effort into the net.

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It’s hard to imagine Zverev ever becoming a Grand Slam champion while his serve, and the points it generates, can veer so quickly from lethal to liability.

Charlie Eccleshare

How did Alcaraz handle the pressure?

One of the truisms of tennis is to pay very close attention to what a player does under pressure when they really need a point.

Alcaraz was fighting his way out of crucial break point danger all afternoon and never more so in the fourth game of the fifth set when he fell 0-40 down after he had earned what looked like it might be the decisive break and was four games from the finish line. He climbed out of that hole with the help of a faltering Zverev, then finally had a game point of his own.

Players talk about the power of Alacaraz’s shots with a kind of awe. Out of nowhere, he pulls the trigger and rockets the ball by them through the back of the court. Zverev was looking out for something like that, hanging deep in the court to return his serve. He seemingly forgot about the shot that had been one of Alcaraz’s most effective weapons on a day when he couldn’t rely on much of his arsenal.

Alcaraz cracked a serve to Zverev’s backhand and when the return floated back to him, he didn’t try to pound a ball through the back wall. He feathered a drop shot to the front of the court. Zverev didn’t bother running for it.

He did it again in the final game at 15-15. It worked.

Matt Futterman

What did Alcaraz say after the final?

On court, Alcaraz said:

“My team has been incredible the last months. We were struggling a lot with the injury, coming back, didn’t feel well, and then the next weeks there were a lot of doubts, coming here, practicing but not too much… I’m really grateful to have the team that I have.”

Speaking to Eurosport, Alcaraz said:

“With the nerves, I didn’t play my best tennis in the third set… but we were in the final of a Grand Slam! Being 4-0 in the fourth set helped me a little bit to find relief and then in the fifth set it was time to give it all.”

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At his press conference, Alcaraz said:

“Sometimes I do whatever they tell me, and sometimes it depends on my feelings in the moment. I’m trying to be aggressive, to go for it, playing my style — go to net, hit drop shots — and if I miss it, my feelings are really good. When I go for it, the feelings are much better than if I go defensive it and lose it anyway.”

What did Zverev say after the final?

On court, Zverev said:

“You won three different ones… You’re already a hall-of-famer, you already achieved so much. It’s not the last time you’re going to win this.

“We were close, but not enough. Hopefully one day we’ll be able to hold this trophy together.

At his press conference, Zverev said:

“I feel like I did everything I could today. F***, there were some unlucky moments, the serve in the fifth set I heard was out… He played fantastically. He played better than me the fourth and fifth set.

“He changed his tactics in the fifth set, higher and deeper, so I could not create as much power. I need to look at myself and at my team to see if I can get to the same level.”

Recommended reading

  • French Open live updates: How Carlos Alcaraz won
  • Alexander Zverev “never ever wants to hear” about his case again, but tennis remains in limbo
  • Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner were the future of men’s tennis. Now, they are its present

(Top photo: Tim Goode/Getty Images)

Game, Set, Match: Carlos Alcaraz beats Alexander Zverev to win first French Open (2024)

FAQs

Game, Set, Match: Carlos Alcaraz beats Alexander Zverev to win first French Open? ›

PARIS -- Carlos Alcaraz became the youngest man to win Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces after defeating Alexander Zverev in five sets to capture the French Open on Sunday. The two battled for 4 hours, 19 minutes, but Alcaraz came through 6-3, 2-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2.

Who became the youngest player to win the French Open Championship in 1989 at what age did he win? ›

Chang. Michael Chang holds the distinction of being the youngest male player to win a major championship, winning the French Open title in 1989, at 17-years, 109 days old.

Who won the men's singles at the 2008 French Open tennis championship? ›

Three-time defending champion Rafael Nadal defeated Roger Federer in a rematch of the two previous years' finals, 6–1, 6–3, 6–0 to win the men's singles tennis title at the 2008 French Open.

Who is the men's single champion in the French Open? ›

French players have won the most French Open men's singles titles, with 38 victories, followed by players from Spain (20) and Australia (11). The current champion is Carlos Alcaraz, who beat Alexander Zverev in the 2024 final.

How many matches has Carlos Alcaraz won? ›

Carlos Alcaraz
Singles
Career record181–49
Career titles14
Highest rankingNo. 1 (12 September 2022)
Current rankingNo. 3 (24 June 2024)
22 more rows

Who is the youngest male tennis player to win a Grand Slam? ›

In fact, the first Grand Slam final Alcaraz played in and won was at the 2022 U.S. Open. At just 19 years old, the Spaniard defeated Casper Ruud on the hard courts of New York to claim the title.

Has a Chinese person ever won a Grand Slam? ›

Over the course of her career, Li won nine singles titles including two Grand Slam titles at the 2011 French Open and 2014 Australian Open.

Which male tennis player has won all time record French Open titles? ›

Male tennis players with the most French Open wins 1968-2024

As of 2024, Rafael Nadal had won the most French Open titles, with a total of 14.

How many American men have won the French Open? ›

This tournament has been called the French Open since 1968. In that span of time, an American has won the major only four times.

Who won the 1981 Men's French Open Championship? ›

Three-time defending champion Björn Borg defeated Ivan Lendl in the final, 6–1, 4–6, 6–2, 3–6, 6–1 to win the men's singles tennis title at the 1981 French Open. It was his sixth French Open title and his eleventh and last major title overall.

What is Carlos Alcaraz winning streak? ›

Carlos Alcaraz's 13-match winning streak on grass is over, ended by the home favourite Jack Draper in the second round of the Cinch Championships on Thursday afternoon.

Why is Carlos Alcaraz called Carlitos? ›

He prefers to be called "Carlitos."

In 2022, he said, "No me gusta que me llamen Carlos. Me gusta Carlitos o Charlie. Sinceramente, Carlos me parece muy serio y parece que he hecho algo malo." This roughly translates to: "I don't like being called Carlos.

Which Grand Slam did Carlos Alcaraz win? ›

Who was the youngest player to win the Open? ›

The oldest winner of the Open Championship is Tom Morris Sr. (or Old Tom Morris) who was 46 years and 102 days old when he won in 1867. His son, Tom Morris Jr., is the youngest winner of the championship, he was 17 years and 156 days old when he won the 1868 Open Championship.

Who won the French Open in 1989? ›

Michael Chang defeated Stefan Edberg in the final, 6–1, 3–6, 4–6, 6–4, 6–2 to win the men's singles tennis title at the 1989 French Open. It was his first major title.

How old was Chang when he won the French Open? ›

On June 11, 1989, Chang beat Stefan Edberg to become the youngest ever French Open champion at 17 years, 3 months and 20 days.

How old was Wilander when he won the French Open? ›

His breakthrough came suddenly and unexpectedly when he won the 1982 French Open at the age of 17. Hailey, Idaho, U.S.

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