Dominic Thiem outlasts Alexander Zverev, comes back from two sets down to win US Open and first Grand Slam title
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© Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY Sports Dominic Thiem (right), celebrates his win over childhood friend Alexander Zverev at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
NEW YORK — A nation famous for its alps and its skiers has a new champion. His name is Dominic Thiem and he reached the summit of his own sport Sunday in a place that is 20 feet above sea level, awakening from a horrible start to capture his first Grand Slam title on his fourth try and become the first Austrian to win the U.S. Open.
Showing world-class resilience in a 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (6) victory over No. 7 Alexander Zverev of Germany, the third-ranked Thiem joins Thomas Muster, who won the French Open in 1995, as the only Austrian to win a major tennis championship. Thiem, of course, is the first man from any nation to capture a major title before no fans, and during a pandemic.
The players, who are close friends, embraced after Thiem scooped himself up off the court, his legs cramping.
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A visibly stunned Zverev sat on his chair for several moments, holding his hands clasped below his chin as Thiem’s team surrounded him and congratulated him as he laughed, almost in disbelief.
“We starting to know each other back in 2014 … developed straight away a great friendship and then 2016 a great rivalry started,” Thiem said before lifting the trophy. “We made great things happen on the court as well (as) off the court.”
Turning to Zverev, who was softly crying, Thiem said: “It’s amazing how far our journey brought us to share this moment with you. Really I wish we could have two winners today, I think we both deserved it. … You’re going to make it 100 percent. You’re going to make your parents proud.”
It was the absence of family that seemed to upset Zverev the most during his comments.
“I want to congratulate Dominic on the first of many Grand Slam titles. … It was a tough battle. I wish you would have missed a little bit more so I could have (held) that trophy up, but here I am giving the runner’s-up speech,” Zverev said.
“There’s some special people missing in the crowd today,” he continued, as he began to cry. “I want to thank my parents. They’re always with me in every single tournament I go to and unfortunately my dad and my mother tested positive before the tournament and they couldn’t have gone with me. … I miss them, but … man, this is tough. I’m sure they’re sitting at home and even though I lost they’re pretty proud. I wish one day that I can bring the trophy home.”
When top-ranked Novak Djokovic, a 17-time Slam champion, was defaulted in the fourth round for accidentally hitting a linesperson in the throat with a swatted ball, the Open was assured of having a first-time winner. Thiem, who lost only one set through the first six rounds, finally won the ultimate prize, after dropping his first two major finals to Rafael Nadal in the French, and the Australian Open final in a tight five sets to Djokovic seven months ago.
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The journey to the finish was about as grueling as it could be, however, as Zverev jumped out to a two-set lead and then served for the match at 5-3 of the fifth after breaking Thiem in Game 8, only to have Thiem break back and hold for 5-5. Like boxers in the final round, almost out on their feet, Thiem and Zverev pushed on, breaking each other to take the fifth set to a tiebreak. Zverev jumped out 2-0, but he had two double faults – he had 15 in the match, and they played a huge role in the outcome. He fought off two match points at 6-4, before Thiem knocked a forehand passing shot for 7-6 and then watched as Zverev’s backhand sailed wide to clinch the title after four hours and 1 minute.
Thiem, 27, has now won eight of his 10 matches against Zverev, 23, who battled him over four taut sets in the Australian Open semifinals seven months ago. Hoping to become the first German man to win the Open since Boris Becker in 1989, Zverev had the misfortune to see Thiem do to him what he had done to Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta in the semifinals. Carreno Busta bolted out to a two-set lead before Zverev took command.
Indeed, Thiem followed the playbook of Naomi Osaka in the women’s final the day before; Osaka, too, had a disastrous start and then turned it around.
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A total of 14,273 COVID-19 tests were administered in the tennis bubble, and just before the bubble was broken down, Thiem prevailed in the toughest test of them all, enduring cramps at the end that limited his movement.
Thiem was in trouble almost before he had his warm-ups off at the outset. Zverev broke him in the third game and again in the seventh, punishing Thiem for putting so few of his first serves (10 of 27) in play. Zverev pounded 16 winners to just four for Thiem, who suddenly looked very vulnerable after two weeks of dominance. Zverev closed it out with an ace, and kept the onslaught going in the second, blasting out to a two-break lead, and had three set points with Thiem serving at 1-5. Thiem finally stiffened, sticking a service winner en route to saving all three of the set points, then broke Zverev for the first time for 5-3, angling a forehand volley winner on game point. Thiem held at love for 5-4, before Zverev drilled a forehand down the line and went up two sets to love when Thiem missed a forehand pass.
© Danielle Parhizkaran, USA TODAY Sports Dominic Thiem of Austria hits a forehand against Alexander Zverev of Germany in the US Open men’s final.
The scoreboard may have said otherwise, but Thiem was steadily elevating his game, and it didn’t hurt his cause at all that Zverev’s serve began to wobble badly; he had nine double faults in the second and third sets alone.That gave Thiem an opening, and he seized it, breaking Zverev at 15 in the 10th game of the third, sealing the set when Zverev hit an errant forehand.
Thiem had a prime opportunity to move ahead in the fourth set, getting two break points at 15-40, one point from taking a 4-2 lead, before Zverev reeled off four straight points forcing two forehand errors to get to 3-3. The prosperity did not last long, however. Another double fault gave Thiem a break point at 30-40 in Game 8, and this time Thiem secured it, as Zverev netted a forehand.
Thiem served it out at love to force a fifth set, something that seemed unimaginable just a short time before.
Follow Wayne Coffey on Twitter @wr_coffey
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dominic Thiem outlasts Alexander Zverev, comes back from two sets down to win US Open and first Grand Slam title
Video: Thiem stages stunning comeback to win U.S. Open (Reuters)
Thiem stages stunning comeback to win U.S. Open
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