This afternoon on Court Philippe-Chatrier, Flavio Cobolli will play the biggest match of his career. The 23-year-old Italian, seeded tenth, faces Alexander Zverev in his very first Grand Slam final, opposing a three-time major finalist seeking his breakthrough title.
Cobolli's run through Roland-Garros 2026 reads like fiction. Arriving in Paris with just one Grand Slam quarterfinal on his résumé, he has grown in confidence with each round. His semifinal berth via walkover after Matteo Arnaldi's withdrawal should not overshadow the quality of his earlier performances, particularly a brilliant fourth-round victory over home favorite Hugo Gaston.
Born in Rome in 2002, Cobolli represents the new wave of Italian tennis that emerged in the wake of Jannik Sinner and Matteo Berrettini. His game is built on early ball-striking, a punishing two-handed backhand and remarkable court coverage for his frame (1.83m). On clay, he excels at patient point construction before accelerating at the right moment.
Against Zverev, the numbers are not in his favor. The German leads 3-1 in their head-to-head and possesses incomparable experience at this level. But Cobolli holds one key argument: a victory over Zverev this very season during the clay-court swing.
The Italian enters this final with the freshness of a player who has nothing to lose. Where Zverev carries the weight of three lost major finals, Cobolli can play freely, unburdened by the favorite's pressure. This psychological contrast could prove decisive in the crucial moments.
Regardless of the outcome, Cobolli is reaching a historic milestone. At 23, he establishes himself among the world's elite and proves that Italian tennis extends well beyond a single name.


