On Sunday at 3 PM, Court Philippe-Chatrier will host a final that feels like a mission for Alexander Zverev and a waking dream for Flavio Cobolli. On one side, the world number 3 and his relentless pursuit of a first Grand Slam title. On the other, the world number 14 who had never advanced past the fourth round at a Major before this Parisian fortnight.
Their head-to-head record leaves little room for statistical suspense. Zverev leads 3-1 and dominated their most recent encounter in Madrid in April with a clinical 6-1, 6-4. The 29-year-old German arrives in Paris with metronomic consistency: 62 wins against 22 losses over the past 52 weeks, a devastating serve and baseline solidity that few players can shake on clay.
But Grand Slam finals play by their own rules, and Zverev knows this better than anyone. Three major finals, three defeats, including the one that still haunts German tennis: two sets to love up against Dominic Thiem at the 2020 US Open before collapsing in five. At Roland Garros in 2024, Carlos Alcaraz denied him the title. In Melbourne in 2025, Jannik Sinner closed the door. The weight of being a perennial runner-up looms over every forehand.
Cobolli, meanwhile, carries no such burden. The 24-year-old Roman has dropped only two sets across five matches in Paris. His patient baseline game, his ability to vary pace and his composure in key moments have carried him through the draw with impressive regularity. The semifinal walkover grants him three days of recovery, a significant physical advantage against an opponent who battled through four sets against Mensik on Friday.
The intangible factor in this final: emotion. Cobolli will play for his friend Arnaldi, forced out by illness. The energy of the Parisian crowd, traditionally behind the underdog, could transform Philippe-Chatrier into a cauldron.
Zverev remains the logical favourite. But Roland Garros 2026, which has already seen Sinner, Alcaraz and Djokovic fall, has consistently defied expectations.

