
Epic Alcaraz comeback seals amazing French Open triumph
Carlos Alcaraz has come back from the dead in one of the greatest of all grand slam finals, saving three match points in the fourth set before rallying to outlast Jannik Sinner and successfully defend his French Open crown.
After the longest and perhaps most epic of all Roland Garros showdowns - lasting five hours and 29 minutes - champion Alcaraz finally prevailed 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 [10-2] against world No.1 Sinner to win his fifth grand slam in a true Sunday spectacular.
There seemed no way back for the 22-year-old Spaniard when he trailed 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set with Sinner poised to win his third slam in a row after wins in the US Open and Australian Open.
But summoning up incredible resolve as well as extraordinary brilliance, Alcaraz, on his way to winning from two sets down for the first time in his stellar career, surged back to take the fourth set and then forge into a 5-3 lead in the decider.
But again, the match wasn't over as Sinner, defying his evident fatigue, broke back when Alcaraz served for the match at 5-4, dragging the incredible contest, full of amazing, lung-busting rallies, into a match tiebreak as it went into its sixth wondrous hour.
Again, Alcaraz raised his game to sublime levels, dominating the breaker and striking one last superlative forehand on the run - incredibly, his 70th winner of the match to Sinner's 53 - to seal the title.
It was the perfect way to end a scintillating duel between the two young modern masters - the first time a grand slam final has been contested by two men born this century - as Alcaraz enjoyed a fifth successive win over the Italian to end Sinner's 20-match winning streak in the majors.
After receiving the trophy from 1999 champion Andre Agassi, Alcaraz paid tribute to his opponent who was returning to the grand slam arena after serving a three-month doping ban.
"Jannik, it's amazing the level you reach," he told Sinner at the presentation. "I am sure you will be champion many, many times and it is a privilege to share the court with you and making history with you.
"I'm just really happy to be able to make history with you in this tournament, in other tournaments. You are a huge inspiration for everyone and myself."
This felt like indisputable evidence that the future of men's tennis belongs to the pair of them, as the two shooting stars have now won the last six grand slams between them. It used to be the 'big four'; now it looks for all the world like a 'big two'.
Their incredible joust in a final had only ever been beaten in length by the 5 hour 53 minute epic between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal at the 2012 Australian Open.
In terms of quality, though, perhaps only the Roger Federer-Rafa Nadal five-set classic at Wimbledon in 2008 could top this, even though these two youngsters were taking the power and speed levels to freakish new peaks.
"It is easier to play than to talk right now," said a crestfallen Sinner. "We tried our best today. We gave everything we had. Some time ago, we would have loved to be here so it's still been an amazing tournament.
"Even though it is very difficult right now, it is okay."
Carlos Alcaraz has come back from the dead in one of the greatest of all grand slam finals, saving three match points in the fourth set before rallying to outlast Jannik Sinner and successfully defend his French Open crown.
After the longest and perhaps most epic of all Roland Garros showdowns - lasting five hours and 29 minutes - champion Alcaraz finally prevailed 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 [10-2] against world No.1 Sinner to win his fifth grand slam in a true Sunday spectacular.
There seemed no way back for the 22-year-old Spaniard when he trailed 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set with Sinner poised to win his third slam in a row after wins in the US Open and Australian Open.
But summoning up incredible resolve as well as extraordinary brilliance, Alcaraz, on his way to winning from two sets down for the first time in his stellar career, surged back to take the fourth set and then forge into a 5-3 lead in the decider.
But again, the match wasn't over as Sinner, defying his evident fatigue, broke back when Alcaraz served for the match at 5-4, dragging the incredible contest, full of amazing, lung-busting rallies, into a match tiebreak as it went into its sixth wondrous hour.
Again, Alcaraz raised his game to sublime levels, dominating the breaker and striking one last superlative forehand on the run - incredibly, his 70th winner of the match to Sinner's 53 - to seal the title.
It was the perfect way to end a scintillating duel between the two young modern masters - the first time a grand slam final has been contested by two men born this century - as Alcaraz enjoyed a fifth successive win over the Italian to end Sinner's 20-match winning streak in the majors.
After receiving the trophy from 1999 champion Andre Agassi, Alcaraz paid tribute to his opponent who was returning to the grand slam arena after serving a three-month doping ban.
"Jannik, it's amazing the level you reach," he told Sinner at the presentation. "I am sure you will be champion many, many times and it is a privilege to share the court with you and making history with you.
"I'm just really happy to be able to make history with you in this tournament, in other tournaments. You are a huge inspiration for everyone and myself."
This felt like indisputable evidence that the future of men's tennis belongs to the pair of them, as the two shooting stars have now won the last six grand slams between them. It used to be the 'big four'; now it looks for all the world like a 'big two'.
Their incredible joust in a final had only ever been beaten in length by the 5 hour 53 minute epic between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal at the 2012 Australian Open.
In terms of quality, though, perhaps only the Roger Federer-Rafa Nadal five-set classic at Wimbledon in 2008 could top this, even though these two youngsters were taking the power and speed levels to freakish new peaks.
"It is easier to play than to talk right now," said a crestfallen Sinner. "We tried our best today. We gave everything we had. Some time ago, we would have loved to be here so it's still been an amazing tournament.
"Even though it is very difficult right now, it is okay."
Carlos Alcaraz has come back from the dead in one of the greatest of all grand slam finals, saving three match points in the fourth set before rallying to outlast Jannik Sinner and successfully defend his French Open crown.
After the longest and perhaps most epic of all Roland Garros showdowns - lasting five hours and 29 minutes - champion Alcaraz finally prevailed 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 [10-2] against world No.1 Sinner to win his fifth grand slam in a true Sunday spectacular.
There seemed no way back for the 22-year-old Spaniard when he trailed 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set with Sinner poised to win his third slam in a row after wins in the US Open and Australian Open.
But summoning up incredible resolve as well as extraordinary brilliance, Alcaraz, on his way to winning from two sets down for the first time in his stellar career, surged back to take the fourth set and then forge into a 5-3 lead in the decider.
But again, the match wasn't over as Sinner, defying his evident fatigue, broke back when Alcaraz served for the match at 5-4, dragging the incredible contest, full of amazing, lung-busting rallies, into a match tiebreak as it went into its sixth wondrous hour.
Again, Alcaraz raised his game to sublime levels, dominating the breaker and striking one last superlative forehand on the run - incredibly, his 70th winner of the match to Sinner's 53 - to seal the title.
It was the perfect way to end a scintillating duel between the two young modern masters - the first time a grand slam final has been contested by two men born this century - as Alcaraz enjoyed a fifth successive win over the Italian to end Sinner's 20-match winning streak in the majors.
After receiving the trophy from 1999 champion Andre Agassi, Alcaraz paid tribute to his opponent who was returning to the grand slam arena after serving a three-month doping ban.
"Jannik, it's amazing the level you reach," he told Sinner at the presentation. "I am sure you will be champion many, many times and it is a privilege to share the court with you and making history with you.
"I'm just really happy to be able to make history with you in this tournament, in other tournaments. You are a huge inspiration for everyone and myself."
This felt like indisputable evidence that the future of men's tennis belongs to the pair of them, as the two shooting stars have now won the last six grand slams between them. It used to be the 'big four'; now it looks for all the world like a 'big two'.
Their incredible joust in a final had only ever been beaten in length by the 5 hour 53 minute epic between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal at the 2012 Australian Open.
In terms of quality, though, perhaps only the Roger Federer-Rafa Nadal five-set classic at Wimbledon in 2008 could top this, even though these two youngsters were taking the power and speed levels to freakish new peaks.
"It is easier to play than to talk right now," said a crestfallen Sinner. "We tried our best today. We gave everything we had. Some time ago, we would have loved to be here so it's still been an amazing tournament.
"Even though it is very difficult right now, it is okay."
Carlos Alcaraz has come back from the dead in one of the greatest of all grand slam finals, saving three match points in the fourth set before rallying to outlast Jannik Sinner and successfully defend his French Open crown.
After the longest and perhaps most epic of all Roland Garros showdowns - lasting five hours and 29 minutes - champion Alcaraz finally prevailed 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 [10-2] against world No.1 Sinner to win his fifth grand slam in a true Sunday spectacular.
There seemed no way back for the 22-year-old Spaniard when he trailed 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set with Sinner poised to win his third slam in a row after wins in the US Open and Australian Open.
But summoning up incredible resolve as well as extraordinary brilliance, Alcaraz, on his way to winning from two sets down for the first time in his stellar career, surged back to take the fourth set and then forge into a 5-3 lead in the decider.
But again, the match wasn't over as Sinner, defying his evident fatigue, broke back when Alcaraz served for the match at 5-4, dragging the incredible contest, full of amazing, lung-busting rallies, into a match tiebreak as it went into its sixth wondrous hour.
Again, Alcaraz raised his game to sublime levels, dominating the breaker and striking one last superlative forehand on the run - incredibly, his 70th winner of the match to Sinner's 53 - to seal the title.
It was the perfect way to end a scintillating duel between the two young modern masters - the first time a grand slam final has been contested by two men born this century - as Alcaraz enjoyed a fifth successive win over the Italian to end Sinner's 20-match winning streak in the majors.
After receiving the trophy from 1999 champion Andre Agassi, Alcaraz paid tribute to his opponent who was returning to the grand slam arena after serving a three-month doping ban.
"Jannik, it's amazing the level you reach," he told Sinner at the presentation. "I am sure you will be champion many, many times and it is a privilege to share the court with you and making history with you.
"I'm just really happy to be able to make history with you in this tournament, in other tournaments. You are a huge inspiration for everyone and myself."
This felt like indisputable evidence that the future of men's tennis belongs to the pair of them, as the two shooting stars have now won the last six grand slams between them. It used to be the 'big four'; now it looks for all the world like a 'big two'.
Their incredible joust in a final had only ever been beaten in length by the 5 hour 53 minute epic between Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal at the 2012 Australian Open.
In terms of quality, though, perhaps only the Roger Federer-Rafa Nadal five-set classic at Wimbledon in 2008 could top this, even though these two youngsters were taking the power and speed levels to freakish new peaks.
"It is easier to play than to talk right now," said a crestfallen Sinner. "We tried our best today. We gave everything we had. Some time ago, we would have loved to be here so it's still been an amazing tournament.
"Even though it is very difficult right now, it is okay."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
39 minutes ago
- West Australian
Insanity! Was this the greatest tennis match of all?
Alex de Minaur called it "insanity", Andre Agassi shook his head in disbelief from the VIP seats and Mats Wilander felt they were playing at a "not human" level. Other luminaries simply swooned it was the best tennis match they'd ever seen. Indeed, Carlos Alcaraz's 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (10-2) triumph over Jannik Sinner in the longest and perhaps best of all French Open finals was so astonishing that even the Spanish champ himself was asked where it belonged in the list of the greatest contests the sport had ever witnessed. Modestly suggesting it wasn't as good as the Novak Djokovic-Rafael Nadal Australian Open epic in 2012 - which at five hours 53 minutes was the only final to last longer than Sunday's 5:29 marathon - Alcaraz, who saved three match points before prevailing, said he was just proud it was being mentioned as one of the finest of all. "I don't know if our match is in the same table as them," he said when asked how it compared with Rafa Nadal and Roger Federer's final of 2008 and the Bjorn Borg-John McEnroe 1980 epics, both at Wimbledon. "But just happy to put our match and our names in the history of the grand slams, in the history of Roland Garros. I leave the discussion to the people..." Well, the tennis people were awed. "The level of this whole match was insanity!!!!! What a day to be a fan of this beautiful sport," enthused Australia's main man de Minaur on X as he reflected on a contest between the two men he's played a combined 14 times and not yet managed a win. This was a day to see why. Four-time grand slam champ Jim Courier, commentating on TNT Sport, echoed 'Demon's' incredulity as he said: "It's insane how good this is. Everybody's in disbelief at what they're seeing." "One of the best 5th sets ever alongside Federer vs Nadal '08 Wimbledon + Djok vs Nadal AO 2012," tweeted former US Open champ Marin Cilic. "Unbelievable level." Sergi Bruguera, Spain's two-time French Open champ, told Alcaraz it had been the best match he'd ever witnessed, a view echoed by Greg Rusedski, Britain's former US Open finalist, who declared on BBC radio: "For me, personally, this goes down as the greatest tennis match I've ever seen. "The standard was just exceptional. It's just incredible how hard these guys hit the ball." So incredible indeed that seven-time grand slam single champ John McEnroe, talking on TNT Sport, wondered if the pair might even have eclipsed the king of clay, 14-time Roland Garros champ Rafa Nadal, here. "It was an honour to witness. I've been doing this 30 years, that's one of the all-timers easily," said McEnroe. "You would make a serious argument with both guys that they would be favoured to beat Nadal, at his best. "Do I think they're gonna reach 20, 24 (titles), either one of them? No, because that plateau is so hard - but these two guys right now, it's like when you watch the NBA and you say nobody could be better than Michael Jordan. The tennis level right now is higher than I've ever seen." Three-time Australian Open champ Wilander was left marvelling: "I cannot believe how lucky we are that we are going to have this rivalry as they have taken our sport to another level. "I've seen Federer and Nadal, they played a couple of good finals but nothing comes close to this one to me. "Because the anticipation was so high, especially from my side because I witnessed their matches and I always think that this is not possible, they are playing at a pace that is not human."


Perth Now
41 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Insanity! Was this the greatest tennis match of all?
Alex de Minaur called it "insanity", Andre Agassi shook his head in disbelief from the VIP seats and Mats Wilander felt they were playing at a "not human" level. Other luminaries simply swooned it was the best tennis match they'd ever seen. Indeed, Carlos Alcaraz's 4-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (10-2) triumph over Jannik Sinner in the longest and perhaps best of all French Open finals was so astonishing that even the Spanish champ himself was asked where it belonged in the list of the greatest contests the sport had ever witnessed. Modestly suggesting it wasn't as good as the Novak Djokovic-Rafael Nadal Australian Open epic in 2012 - which at five hours 53 minutes was the only final to last longer than Sunday's 5:29 marathon - Alcaraz, who saved three match points before prevailing, said he was just proud it was being mentioned as one of the finest of all. "I don't know if our match is in the same table as them," he said when asked how it compared with Rafa Nadal and Roger Federer's final of 2008 and the Bjorn Borg-John McEnroe 1980 epics, both at Wimbledon. "But just happy to put our match and our names in the history of the grand slams, in the history of Roland Garros. I leave the discussion to the people..." Well, the tennis people were awed. "The level of this whole match was insanity!!!!! What a day to be a fan of this beautiful sport," enthused Australia's main man de Minaur on X as he reflected on a contest between the two men he's played a combined 14 times and not yet managed a win. This was a day to see why. Four-time grand slam champ Jim Courier, commentating on TNT Sport, echoed 'Demon's' incredulity as he said: "It's insane how good this is. Everybody's in disbelief at what they're seeing." "One of the best 5th sets ever alongside Federer vs Nadal '08 Wimbledon + Djok vs Nadal AO 2012," tweeted former US Open champ Marin Cilic. "Unbelievable level." Sergi Bruguera, Spain's two-time French Open champ, told Alcaraz it had been the best match he'd ever witnessed, a view echoed by Greg Rusedski, Britain's former US Open finalist, who declared on BBC radio: "For me, personally, this goes down as the greatest tennis match I've ever seen. "The standard was just exceptional. It's just incredible how hard these guys hit the ball." So incredible indeed that seven-time grand slam single champ John McEnroe, talking on TNT Sport, wondered if the pair might even have eclipsed the king of clay, 14-time Roland Garros champ Rafa Nadal, here. "It was an honour to witness. I've been doing this 30 years, that's one of the all-timers easily," said McEnroe. "You would make a serious argument with both guys that they would be favoured to beat Nadal, at his best. "Do I think they're gonna reach 20, 24 (titles), either one of them? No, because that plateau is so hard - but these two guys right now, it's like when you watch the NBA and you say nobody could be better than Michael Jordan. The tennis level right now is higher than I've ever seen." Three-time Australian Open champ Wilander was left marvelling: "I cannot believe how lucky we are that we are going to have this rivalry as they have taken our sport to another level. "I've seen Federer and Nadal, they played a couple of good finals but nothing comes close to this one to me. "Because the anticipation was so high, especially from my side because I witnessed their matches and I always think that this is not possible, they are playing at a pace that is not human."

AU Financial Review
2 hours ago
- AU Financial Review
Alcaraz beats Sinner in stunning French Open final comeback
Paris | Carlos Alcaraz has come back from the dead in one of the greatest of all grand slam finals, saving three match points in the fourth set before rallying to outlast Jannik Sinner and defend his French Open crown. The Spaniard rallied from two sets down to beat Sinner 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (10-2) on Sunday (Monday AEST) and win the French Open title for a second straight year. AP