Fourth set, and Alexander Zverev's body is starting to quit on him.
Watch him between points — he stretches the back of his thigh, rolls the ankle, tips a little white powder into his mouth, electrolytes against legs that are going. The physio comes out. He's swinging with more spin and less venom now, 500 extra revolutions on the ball, the safe shot of a man who can't trust his legs to recover from the bold one. Across the net, Flavio Cobolli is bouncing, fresh, the fitter man by a distance.
By every physical measure, Cobolli should win from here.
He'll take exactly one more set off him.
Here's the number that explains the whole match. Across the final, Zverev won 46% of the points he had to play from defense — scrambling, stretched, out of position. The tournament average is 33%. So even as his body failed him, he was fighting harder from the back foot than anyone else in the draw had managed all fortnight. That is not fitness. Fitness is the thing he'd lost. That is something else.
Rewind to the start and you'd never have predicted it would come to this, because for long stretches the match swung Cobolli's way.
It opened perfectly for the German — 6-1, first set, barely a stumble, that cross-court forehand humming. Then, second set, 3-3, Zverev double-faults twice and hands over his serve. Small thing. Enormous thing. Because Cobolli takes the confidence and goes looking for his forehand — the big one, the Italian's best shot — and from there he swings freer, bigger, more sure of himself. 4-6. Set even.
The third went back to Zverev, 6-4, on two Cobolli forehand errors at the worst moment. But the fourth is where it nearly came apart. Zverev opens the set with two more double faults and drops his serve again — the tell of a man who can feel the finish line and tightens at the sight of it. The match settles into a long cross-court backhand duel, neither blinking, and somewhere in there Zverev's movement starts to go. The legs. The stretching. The powder. The physio.
And still he keeps finding ways. Down 0-40 on Cobolli's serve, he claws back to 3-3. Loses his serve immediately, 4-3 Cobolli. By 5-4 you can see the safe, loopier ball, the margin a tired player buys himself. He knows what's happening to his body. So he changes the plan: stop running, come forward, end points early. It almost works. 6-5, physio out again, Zverev ready to serve it out — and Cobolli, fresher, drags it to a tiebreak.
The tiebreak is a small horror film. 3-1 Zverev, knowing his legs may not survive a fifth set, knowing he should finish here. Cobolli breaks back. A Zverev double fault. 5-3 Cobolli. Then Cobolli nets an easy one at the net — a gift, a door reopening — and on the very next point answers with a monstrous forehand down the line that slams it shut again. Set Cobolli, 7-6(5). Fifth set coming. Everything Zverev feared.
So here is where the match should turn on the body. The fresher legs win the decider. That's the rule.
Except the thing that broke in the fifth wasn't the calmer man's nerve. Cobolli, the fitter player, started spending himself emotionally — head down, frustrated, loud in the wrong way. Zverev, the one who'd been stretching dead legs an hour earlier, went quiet and cold. Cobolli loses his serve, 1-0. Then 2-0, 3-0, the German serving on legs that shouldn't hold, saving games he had no physical right to save. Now it's Cobolli calling for the physio. Now it's Cobolli who looks like the tired one — not in the legs, but in the part that decides matches when the legs are equal.
6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-1. Fourth Grand Slam final, and at last the first title. The years of near-misses, the finals that slipped away — done. With Sinner gone in the second round and Alcaraz never there at all, the door to Paris stood open, and the only thing that nearly closed it on Zverev was Zverev's own body. He wouldn't let it.
There's a version of this final the cramps win. There's a version where the legs go, the head follows, and the fresher 24-year-old lifts the cup. That version is the normal one. It didn't happen here.
His body gave out. He got tougher anyway. The victory belonged to the most tenacious — and that says it all.