Danish 19-year-old’s victory over Novak Djokovic to win the Paris Masters may finally herald a new dawn that sweeps ancien regime away
“He is like a boxer with an uppercut,” said Holger Rune’s coach Patrick Mouratoglou on Sunday night, after his 19-year-old charge had completed one of the season’s most dramatic upsets. “He can use it at any time.”
Mouratoglou was talking about the way that Rune – an athletic and baby-faced Dane – can abruptly inject violence into a rally that is apparently going nowhere. “His pace is pom, pom, pom, and then pom – he speeds up all of a sudden.” This was the attribute that allowed Rune to outhit Novak Djokovic – still the world’s most feared player at 35 – in Sunday’s final of the Paris Masters.
Rune’s 3-6, 6-3, 7-5 comeback win resonated around the sport like the tocsin that announced the dawn of the French Revolution. Because the ancien regime – that group of elite players that was once known as the Big Four – seem in ever-greater danger of being swept away.
Two of the legendary Four – Roger Federer and Andy Murray – have already vacated their posts because their bodies eventually cried “enough” (even if Murray is still trying to defy medical science as he battles on with his metal hip).