Alexander Zverev signals arrival with win over Djokovic in Italian Open final
German moves to career-high No. 10 in rankings
Alexander Zverev signaled his anticipated arrival among the tennis elite by defeating Novak Djokovic 6-4, 6-3 Sunday to win the Italian Open.
The 20-year-old Zverev became the youngest player to win a Masters 1000 event since Djokovic won in Miami a decade ago at 19.
"I don't know what to say," Zverev said during the trophy presentation. "Coming in to this week I never thought I could be standing here in the finals or getting this trophy."
Zverev broke in the very first game and was never really challenged by Djokovic, who appeared drained after having to win two matches Saturday to reach the final.
Djokovic committed nearly twice as many unforced errors as Zverev — 27 to 14.
The match lasted one hour, 21 minutes.
Afterward, Djokovic announced that Andre Agassi will coach him at the French Open, which starts next Sunday.
The title will move Zverev up to a career-high No. 10 in the rankings Monday and place him among the contenders for Roland Garros. It will also add credibility to the belief by many tennis experts that Zverev will reach No. 1 some day.
"If I have only half of the career Novak has had, I'll be fine," Zverev said when asked if he can follow in Djokovic's footsteps.
Tennis great Rod Laver presented Zverev with the trophy.
"Getting the trophy from Mr. Laver is something very special and something I'll remember for the rest of my career," Zverev said.
Svitolina surges to No. 1
Earlier, Elina Svitolina surged to No. 1 in the season-long rankings race by beating Simona Halep 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 in the women's final.
It was a tour-best fourth title this year for Svitolina and the most prestigious trophy of her career so far. The 22-year-old Ukrainian also leads the tour with 31 match wins this season, putting her among the favourites for the French Open, which starts next Sunday.
"Every day I'm just trying to work on my mental part, my physical, my tennis," Svitolina said. "Everything just came together and I'm very happy that it's happened in such a big tournament."
The fourth-ranked Halep was in full control and serving for the first set at 5-2 when she rolled her right ankle while sliding over what appeared to be a small hole in the Foro Italico stadium court.
While Halep was able to eventually win the opening set, she required treatment to her ankle from a trainer twice and was late getting to shots as the match wore on.
"Sorry guys for third set," Halep told the crowd. "It was a little tough for me to get through but Elina played great."
Halep was playing in her second clay-court final in two weeks after winning the title in Madrid last Sunday.
Svitolina also required medical treatment from a trainer midway through the second set, for an apparent problem with her left leg.
"Hopefully we'll recover, me and Simona, because we're struggling a bit physically," Svitolina said.
During the post-match presentation, Svitolina dropped the cover of the silver trophy on to the red clay court, prompting her to say, "Oops."
The first two sets featured long, nervous baseline rallies in which both players waited for their opponent to commit errors.
"It was very tough first two sets and I'm really happy that it's all finished," Svitolina said.