Historic French Open triumph: Novak Djokovic is crowned Grand Slam king

Historic French Open triumph
Novak Djokovic is crowned Grand Slam king

Novak Djokovic has been chasing this moment for years: With his 23rd Grand Slam victory, the Serb is now the sole record champion at the most important tennis tournaments in the world. In the final of the French Open he has to fight hard against outsider Casper Ruud, but in the end there is a smooth success.

Novak Djokovic dropped to the ground, spread his arms and enjoyed the huge cheers of the spectators. The Serbian superstar crowned himself the sole record winner at the French Open with his 23rd Grand Slam title and once again wrote tennis history. In a high-class final in Paris, the 36-year-old defeated the Norwegian challenger Casper Ruud in 3:13 hours 7:6 (7:1), 6:3, 7:5. With football icon Tom Brady and football greats like Kylian Mbappé as noble fans in the stands, he triumphed for the third time in his seventh final at the classic clay court.

Djokovic left the Spaniard Rafael Nadal behind in the ranking of the Grand Slam titles. In the women’s category, only Margaret Court (24) from Australia has won one of the four major tournaments more often.

The fact that Djokovic was dealing with history was shown by the occupation of his box in the stands. Wearing sunglasses, Brady sat next to Djokovic’s wife Jelena. The 45-year-old’s status as the best professional footballer in history is unchallenged. Djokovic also wants to claim this title in tennis ahead of Nadal and Roger Federer. World champion Mbappé had Zlatan Ibrahimovic in the grandstand, France’s tennis favorite Yannick Noah, boxing legend Mike Tyson and actor Hugh Grant rounded off the crowd of stars.

“Djokovic’s obsession is to win his 21st Grand Slam to overtake Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. His goal is not to beat Medvedev or Zverev,” insinuated tennis journalist and Djokovic biographer Carole Bouchard 2020. The 21. Title would have meant the record back then, then Nadal followed up with two Grand Slam triumphs – now Djokovic countered finally and maybe for eternity.

Djokovic is actually obsessed with numbers, with records. The Serb makes no secret of this. As one of two career goals, he had once officially stated that he would be number one in the world rankings for the most weeks. “If I achieve the former, which I hope to do in the coming year,” Djokovic said in 2020, “my focus will be even more on the Grand Slam tournaments in terms of approach, energy and schedule.”

Ruud starts strong, Djokovic nervous

The guests of honor initially saw a gripping duel. The 24-year-old Ruud ended Alexander Zverev’s dream of his first Grand Slam title with a clear victory in the semifinals. But now Djokovic fought back after a difficult start and proved his extra class and nerves of steel in the tie-break of the first set. After that, he played out the experience in his 34th Grand Slam final. Djokovic is now also the oldest winner in French Open history, ahead of 14-time Paris champion Nadal, who was absent this year through injury. From Monday he will also take over the top of the world rankings from Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz, whom he had worn down in the semifinals. It’s his 388th week as a leader – of course this is also a record.

Ruud, on the other hand, remains unfinished for the time being. The world number four also lost his third Grand Slam final and is still waiting for the first major title of his career. With a cloudy sky in Paris, the folding roof over the Court Philippe-Chatrier opened again after the opening show – the spectators welcomed Djokovic with loud “Nole, Nole” calls. The big outsider was initially unimpressed by the goose bumps atmosphere. Last year, Ruud was temporarily shown in Nadal’s final. Now the Norwegian posed problems for his opponent with a stable game at the beginning. An overhead ball from Djokovic sailed out for the first break, only after 25 minutes did he make it 1: 3.

“I just keep winning”

As against Alcaraz, Djokovic stayed cool. The ball went back and forth 28 times at the Serb’s break point, Ruud also showed nerves for the first time and put the smash into the net to make it 4: 3 from his point of view. For the first time, the spectators in the stands almost stood up with excitement, and Brady jumped up too.

When Djokovic complained to the referee a little later that he was announcing the score too early and thus reducing the break when changing sides, the spectators booed passionately. Not the first time in this tournament. “I don’t care,” said the argumentative Djokovic before the final about the recurring whistles. “It’s not the first time and it probably won’t be the last. I just keep winning.”

The friction seems to goad Djokovic. In the decisive phase of the first sentence, the focus was there. The Serb played better and better, also winning the sixth tie-break of the tournament for the sixth time without a slight error and celebrating after 81 minutes. Ruud wobbled, Djokovic mercilessly exploited the weakness. After the break to make it 2-0, he kept tapping his forehead – a clear sign: Djokovic has the mental advantage. He confidently didn’t allow a breakball anymore and also got the second set. Ruud kept the third round open for a long time, but Djokovic coldly took the serve from him to make it 6: 5. Only a little later, the Serb should be able to celebrate the great triumph.

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