Tennis

French Open: Alexander Zverev hopes to banish Grand Slam final blues against Flavio Cobolli

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By Admin
Sports Journalist
French Open: Alexander Zverev hopes to banish Grand Slam final blues against Flavio Cobolli

Alexander Zverev is in a Grand Slam final once again but this time the world No 3 is very much the favourite against Italian Flavio Cobolli on Sunday.

The 29-year-old, who has lost in all three of his appearances in major finals - including at the 2024 French Open - is looking to go one better on the Roland-Garros clay this time around.

As a player blocked by the golden generation of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and ​Novak Djokovic, and more recently by young guns Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, for once the German has been the beneficiary of a few strokes of luck.

After holder Alcaraz's withdrawal and the ​early departures of Sinner and Djokovic reshaped the Roland-Garros draw, second seed Zverev has capitalised ‌with a calm surge through the field to earn his second Paris final appearance in three years.

"The only thing I can control is that I play good ​tennis," Zverev told reporters after dismantling 26th seed Jakub Mensik in the semi-finals.

"I mean, I'll try to show my level. I'll try to do the right things. That's the only thing that matters to me."

Roland-Garros has long held promise ​for Zverev but it is also where his hopes have frayed, from the brutal ankle injury that ⁠cut short his 2022 semi-final against Nadal to his defeat by ⁠Alcaraz in the 2024 final.

Cobolli - the 10th seed, who is playing in his first Grand Slam final - is a genuine clay court threat, though, having beaten Zverev on his home turf in Munich this season, a result that underlined his ability to disrupt the German's rhythm on the sport's ⁠slowest surface.

"I look forward to playing him in the final. It's his first final so I'm happy for him that he reached it," added Zverev, who holds a ‌3-1 advantage in their head-to-head record.

"He's a great player and a great guy. I like him. I like his dad a lot. Two very good people, just generally.

"We got closer at the Laver Cup in 2024 in Berlin... he's just a nice person. He has a good heart. He's extremely funny if you get to know him."

The 24-year-old Cobolli booked his place in the decider after ⁠fellow Italian Matteo Arnaldi pulled out of their semi-final due to a viral illness, and the ​10th seed will be the fresher player heading into Sunday's match.

"Sometimes it helps. Sometimes it ​doesn't," Cobolli said.

"Maybe having almost four days off is a lot so you lose the rhythm, but also during the warm-up I played well.

"I'll be ready for the final, for sure, but I ⁠also know that I'll be fresh. Maybe it'll help, maybe not. I'll tell you after the final."

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