By Richard Pagliaro | Sunday, June 7, 2026
Photo credit: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty
There’s a thin line between pleasure and pain with a Grand Slam title on the line.
Alexander Zverev channeled adversarial pain into positive fuel to cross a long-awaited finish line.
The second-seeded Zverev out-dueled Flavio Cobolli 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-1 In today’s Roland Garros final to finally reach the Grand Slam promised land and win his maiden major.
After suffering three gut-wrenching Grand Slam final losses, the 29-year-old Zverev began suffering cramps in the later stages of this final.
Taming the firing pain and a feisty Cobolli, Zverev amped up his aggression in the decider. Zverev was 10 of 14 at net in the final set and broke serve three times to fly through the stress and land his career-long dream.
Afterward, Zverev credited cramps he suffered for empowering him to play more proactive tennis.
“It kind of helped me, mentally, that I was cramping,” Zverev told TNT’s Jim Courier afterward. “I was cramping because of emotional effort, I wasn’t cramping because of physical effort. I haven’t cramped probably in 10 years.
“I was very nervous. I was very tightened up. And then once I cramped up, I relaxed. That helped me. I feel like I played better in the fifth set. I played more free. I played more aggressive.
“Today, I think I actually won because of cramps.”
The two finalists are friends and sometime practice partner.
Maiden major finalist Cobolli unwittingly did his buddy a big favor by leaving the court for a bathroom break after winning a dramatic fourth-set tiebreaker with a forehand dagger down the line that sent fans into a frenzy.
Rather than riding that wave of emotional momentum, and testing the second seed’s cramping legs, the 10th-seeded Italian opted to leave the court for a break that gave Zverev time to rest, recover and reignite his game.
The Olympic gold-medal champion resolve to play more proactive tennis in the decider. Cobolli returned to court, immediately dropped serve and fell into an 0-4 hole from which he never recovered.