Toronto Star

Thiem stages comeback for the ages

Austrian first since 1949 to win U.S. Open after losing first two sets

- HOWARD FENDRICH

NEW YORK— A U.S. Open unlike any other finished unlike any other — and Dominic Thiem constructe­d a comeback the likes of which hadn’t been seen in 71 years.

After dropping the opening two sets against Alexander Zverev on Sunday at a nearly empty Arthur Ashe Stadium — fans were banned because of the coronaviru­s pandemic — Thiem slowly but surely turned things around for a 2-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (6) victory across more than four hours to earn his first major championsh­ip.

The 27-year-old from Austria is the first man to win the American Grand Slam tournament after trailing 2-0 in sets in the final since Pancho Gonzalez did it against Ted Schroeder in 1949 at an event then known as the U.S. Championsh­ips and held in Forest Hills.

Not only that, but in a fitting finish to an unpreceden­ted two weeks, this match was decided by a fifth-set tiebreaker, something that had never happened in this tournament’s final.

“I wish we could have two winners today,” Thiem said. “I think we both deserved it.”

When it ended on a groundstro­ke flubbed by Zverev, a 23year-old from Germany, the weary Thiem collapsed on his back way behind the baseline. Zverev — who himself came within two points of the victory — walked around the net to offer a handshake and hug to his pal, two gestures rarely spotted in this era of social distancing.

“I wish you would have missed a little bit more so I could have held that trophy up,” Zverev said, choking up when he mentioned his parents, “but here I am, giving the runners-up speech.”

As Thiem stepped forward to pose for pictures with his shiny new bit of hardware, Zverev remained a few feet behind, one hand clutching his less-impressive silver tray, the other hand on a hip. Thiem had come in 0-3 in Grand Slam finals, but always faced Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic in those others. This time, he was the favourite and came out jittery, but eventually worked his way out of that, while Zverev went from cool and confident to passive and pushed around. The fifth set was just as back-and-forth as the other four, the mistakes rising with the tension and the history in the offing.

Thiem broke in the opening game when Zverev shanked a pair of forehands. Zverev broke right back — and pierced the silence with a rare cry of “Come on!” — when Thiem doublefaul­ted.

Then it was Zverev’s turn to nose ahead, breaking for a 5-3 lead when Thiem sent a downthe-line backhand wide and leaned over, gasping for air.

But with a chance to serve out the biggest win of his nascent career, Zverev faltered, getting broken right back when he pushed a volley into the net.

That began a three-game run for Thiem, who broke to lead 6-5, earning his own chance to serve for it, when Zverev netted a backhand, followed by a long forehand.

After having a trainer check on his right leg during the ensuing changeover, Thiem couldn’t seal the deal, either, and eventually needed a trio of match points to end it.

While this was the No. 7ranked Zverev’s first Slam final, this was the first one that Thiem was supposed to win, following losses to Nadal at the French Open in 2018 and 2019, then to Djokovic at the Australian Open this February — back before the pandemic upended the world and put tennis on a five-month hiatus.

Both men were sluggish at times, listless, even. The play was hardly perfect: They combined for 120 unforced errors to only 95 winners.

In a curious parallel, Zverev balanced his15 aces with15 double-faults, and Thiem had eight in each category.

 ?? MATTHEW STOCKMAN GETTY IMAGES ?? An emotional Dominic Thiem of Austria lays down in celebratio­n after winning the championsh­ip point against Germany’s Alexander Zverev in the U.S. Open final on Sunday.
MATTHEW STOCKMAN GETTY IMAGES An emotional Dominic Thiem of Austria lays down in celebratio­n after winning the championsh­ip point against Germany’s Alexander Zverev in the U.S. Open final on Sunday.

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