TENNIS – ALEXANDER Zverev moved to within touching distance of a long-coveted maiden Grand Slam title, as the German dismantled 26th seed Jakub Mensik 7-5 6-2 3-6 6-3 yesterday to reach the final of the French Open again.
The 29-year-old, who has lost three major finals, including one at Roland Garros two years ago, will face 10th seed Flavio Cobolli for the title, after Matteo Arnaldi withdrew due to illness ahead of their all-Italian clash.
Long denied by the golden generation of Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic, and more recently by young guns Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, Zverev will look to move into the Grand Slam winners’ club tomorrow.
“I knew that it would be my toughest challenge. I managed it and I won, so I’m happy,” said Zverev, who became only the fifth active player to reach multiple Roland Garros finals.
“It’s amazing the way he (Mensik) played these last two weeks, he beat so many unbelievable players. He started playing amazing in the third set, stepping up his level, but this is a Grand Slam with best-of-five-set matches.
“Things happen and your opponents will play better. You have to deal with it. I hope to play another great match on Sunday.”
As the dust settled on the absorbing clash, French Open organisers said Cobolli would go through to his first major title clash after Arnaldi withdrew with a virus.
“It’s not what I wanted to do,” Arnaldi told reporters.
“Last night I started to feel unwell and then at dinner I started to feel so-so in my stomach and I woke up at 1 am and started vomiting.
“It made no sense to play, out of respect for him. It wouldn’t have been a good match.”
Cobolli said Arnaldi’s pullout left him emotional.
“It was tough,” Cobolli added. “When he came to me (with the news), I almost cried. I have a lot of respect for him and he’s an inspiration for a lot of us.”
Zverev will approach the showdown against his close friend Cobolli with caution, having fallen to him in the Munich semi-finals. His last six defeats have been against Italians, with Sinner also claiming four wins and Luciano Darderi one.
When Zverev and Cobolli squared off again in Madrid, it was the German who prevailed to lead their head-to-head record 3-1.
“I look forward to playing him in the final,” Zverev added.
“Of course, it’s his first final, I’m happy for him that he reached it. But the only thing I can control is that I play good tennis. I will try to show my level.”