Novak Djokovic beat Carlos Alcaraz in thrilling fashion to secure a long-awaited Olympic title and complete the career 'Golden Slam'.
Djokovic, who has won a men's record 24 majors and swept up every title there is in tennis, finally clinched Olympic gold at his fifth Games.
The Serb put in his best performance of the year to beat French Open and Wimbledon champion Alcaraz 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (7-2) in front of a packed crowd in Paris.
He is just the fifth player to win the 'Golden Slam' in singles - all four majors and the Olympic title - after Rafael Nadal, Serena Williams, Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf.
Djokovic left this same court at Roland Garros two months ago needing knee surgery, which put his Olympic dream at risk, and his reaction after Sunday's win showed what it meant.
He turned towards his box, arms outstretched in disbelief, before throwing his racquet to the floor.
After hugging Spain's Alcaraz, Djokovic immediately burst into tears and fell to his knees on the middle of the court.
He then unfurled a Serbian flag and clambered into the stands to celebrate with his family and support team.
Alcaraz was also in tears after the match but will leave with a silver medal on his Olympic debut.
Italy's Lorenzo Musetti is the singles bronze medallist, having beaten Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada on Friday.
Djokovic completes tennis with stunning win
This moment will mean as much to Djokovic, if not more, than all the Grand Slams, Masters 1,000 titles and ATP tournaments he has won.
His family watched on from the stands, bearing Serbian flags, with daughter Tara carrying a sign that said "Dad is the best".
Djokovic has spoken about seeing the Olympics as the pinnacle of sport, and the emotions of representing his country have affected him in his past four Games.
He won singles bronze in Beijing in 2008, finished fourth in London 2012, suffered an emotional early loss in Rio in 2016 and lost the bronze-medal match in Tokyo three years ago.
However, Djokovic did not drop a set in Paris and was focused from the outset, determined to get his hands on the one prize that had eluded him for so long.
The final match itself was a test of his determination - he was on the back foot in the first set but did not give in, saving all eight break points he faced and taking advantage as Alcaraz faltered in both tie-breaks.
Latest Stories
-
How does the new Club World Cup work, and why is it so controversial?
4 mins -
Nana Kwame Bediako proposes construction of more state-owned football academies
12 mins -
Watching football frequently is a waste of time – Nana Kwame Bediako
44 mins -
‘We have wasted taxpayers money’ – Herbert Mensah on Ghana’s sporting decline
56 mins -
No African-based quality; achieve international healthcare standards with local solutions – SafeCare Founder
2 hours -
UHC alone insufficient without quality healthcare – PharmAccess CEO warns
2 hours -
CHAG to receive GH¢2.2bn boost; GH¢110m earmarked for 2025 recruitment – MoH
2 hours -
Ghana Industry CEO Awards: Bright Ladzekpo is Most Respected Advertising CEO
2 hours -
Video: Fatawu Issahaku joins Leicester dressing room celebrations after win over West Ham
3 hours -
Kempinski lights up the festive season in grand style
3 hours -
‘We’ll seal every ballot box’ – NDC’s Tanko-Computer slams Ashanti Regional EC boss for blocking party seals
3 hours -
39 CHAG facilities achieve SafeCare Level 4 – Executive Director
3 hours -
Election 2024: NDC elders asks polling agents to uphold their duties and safeguard Ghana’s future
4 hours -
Bank boss takes pay cut after employee ‘tried to kill clients’
4 hours -
Man jailed four years for threatening to shoot, kill citizens during Dec. 7 elections
5 hours