DiegoBAWedding

Former Top 10 player Diego Schwartzman has officially tied the knot with his longtime girlfriend, model Eugenia De Martino. The couple said “I do” on Thursday at Buenos Aires’ Civil Registry No. 1, surrounded by close friends and family.

Schwartzman and De Martino both shared moments from their special day on social media, including the emotional moment the judge pronounced them husband and wife.

Read More: 10 things to know about Diego Schwartzman's career as he retires from tennis in Buenos Aires

The 33-year-old Argentine wore a navy blue jacket over a light blue shirt, paired with white tennis shoes—a stylish nod to his sporting roots. De Martino cut an elegant figure in an ivory satin slip dress, complemented by a matching head scarf and a white floral bouquet.

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“Married to the most beautiful woman on the planet,” wrote former world No. 8 Schwartzman.

“Married to the most beautiful woman on the planet,” wrote former world No. 8 Schwartzman.

As the newlyweds exited the building, friends and family—including Schwartzman’s former coach, Juan Ignacio Chela—celebrated and showered them with rice and heart-shaped confetti. Cameras flashed as the couple proudly displayed their marriage certificate and the traditional red booklet—a hallmark of Argentine weddings—before sharing a kiss.

According to La Nación, the celebrations continued at the stylish Águila Pabellón restaurant in Palermo, one of Buenos Aires’ trendiest neighborhoods.

“Married to the most beautiful woman on the planet,” Schwartzman wrote on Instagram. “Until we grow old.”

Schwartzman and De Martino have been together since 2019, before the former world No. 8 proposed last year in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

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Read More: Diego Schwartzman announces impending retirement, hopes for a 'beautiful' end in 2025

Known affectionately as “El Peque,” short for pequeño (“small” in Spanish), Schwartzman stood just 5-foot-7—but was renowned for playing far bigger than his frame. During his 15-year career, he captured four singles ATP titles, earned 13 Top 10 wins, and reached a career-high ranking of world No. 8 in 2020.

When he reached his first Grand Slam quarterfinal at the 2017 US Open, he became the shortest man to do so in nearly two decades.

Schwartzman officially bid farewell to professional tennis earlier this year at the ATP 250 event in Buenos Aires—the same tournament he won in 2021 on home soil.

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WATCH: Diego Schwartzman's retirement ceremony in Buenos Aires