German tennis star, Alexander Zverev, reached the French Open final after beating 26th seed Jakub Mensik 7-5 6-2 3‑6 6-3, as his search for a maiden Grand Slam title continues.
A tight opening set on Court Philippe Chatrier tilted Zverev’s way when he struck a backhand crosscourt winner in the 11th game to bring up a break point, and he nudged ahead with a delicate shot that Mensik sent into the net.

The world number three sent down a powerful ace to pocket the first set and asserted himself with an early break at the start of the second set, as the 20-year-old Mensik’s level briefly dipped in his maiden Grand Slam semi-final.
Mensik sat with a towel over his head during a changeover and his troubles deepened after the restart, when Zverev took his game up a few notches and sealed a double break, before comfortably doubling his lead in the match.

After a long medical timeout for a neck issue, Czech Mensik mixed his booming serve with deft drop shots to break for a 4-2 lead en route to winning the third set, but Zverev powered through the next with no drama to prevail.
Zverev, 29, has lost three major finals, including one the French Open two years ago, will face 10th seed Flavio Cobolli for the title, after Matteo Arnaldi withdrew due to illness ahead of their all-Italian clash.

“I knew that it would be my toughest challenge. I managed it and I won, so I’m happy,” said Zverev, who became only the fifth active player to reach multiple Roland Garros finals.
“It’s amazing the way he (Mensik) played these last two weeks, he beat so many unbelievable players. He started playing amazing in the third set, stepping up his level.”
“But this is a Grand Slam with best-of-five-set matches. Things happen and your opponents will play better. You have to deal with it. I hope to play another great match on Sunday,” the German explained.
Long denied by the golden generation of Roger Federer, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic, and more recently by young guns Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, Zverev will look to move into the Grand Slam winners’ club on Sunday.
Zverev will approach the showdown against his close friend Cobolli with caution, having fallen to him in the Munich semi-finals.
When Zverev and Cobolli squared off again in Madrid, it was the German who prevailed to lead their head-to-head record 3-1.

“I look forward to playing him in the final,” Zverev mentioned. “Of course, it’s his first final, I’m happy for him that he reached it.”
“But the only thing I can control is that I play good tennis. I will try to show my level.”

