Alexander Zverev needed help. He would find it in the most unexpected way imaginable.
Twice he had led by a set against Flavio Cobolli in the Roland Garros final, and twice he had given that lead back. Just a few minutes earlier, he’d been within a couple of points of victory, only to see the younger and lower-ranked Italian snatch it from his jaws, 7-5 in a fourth-set tiebreaker. Now, for the third time in his career, the 29-year-old German was entering the fifth set of a Grand Slam final. He had lost the other two.
Was he about to do it again, and squander a chance to win his first major title without having to face Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, or Novak Djokovic?
At that moment, Zverev said he felt something he hadn’t felt in a decade. A cramp. Normally this would have been the worst development possible, a potential death knell for his chances. Instead, he welcomed the distraction from his own rising inner tension.
Read more: Alexander Zverev battles past Flavio Cobolli for first Grand Slam title of career at Roland Garros
