Sun | May 10, 2026

Fourth time's the charm for Halep

Published:Saturday | June 9, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Romania's Simona Halep kisses the trophy as she celebrates winning the French Open tennis title against Sloane Stephens of the U.S. at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, yesterday.

PARIS (AP):

Maybe all of those losses in Grand Slam finals helped Simona Halep actually win one.

She'd gone 0-3 in matches with a major trophy on the line before facing Sloane Stephens for the French Open title yesterday, so there was plenty to remember: what it felt like to give a lead away, to make a key mistake, to walk away with regrets.

"All the experience from those three finals that I lost ... was a positive thing," Halep said, "and gave me a little bit more power to believe."

Halep added Grand Slam trophy No. 1 to her No. 1 ranking, coming back from a set and a breakdown to beat Stephens 3-6, 6-4, 6-1 and win the championship at Roland Garros in a match made up of long points and key momentum swings.

"That's the most important thing that I stay there focused," said Halep, the first Romanian to collect a major title since her manager, Virginia Ruzici, at the 1978 French Open. "I believed. And I never gave up."

The 26-year-old Halep was describing this particular match. She could have been speaking about her career.

Halep lost two previous finals at Roland Garros against Maria Sharapova in 2014, then Jelena Ostapenko in 2017 despite leading by a set and 3-0 in the second. Her third runner-up finish came against Caroline Wozniacki at the Australian Open in January.

 

MUGGY AFTERNOON

 

On a muggy afternoon, Halep began slowly, unable to solve Stephens, the 10th-seeded American who won her first Grand Slam title at last year's US Open. Both women are adept at defence, figuring out ways via speed, strength, skill, and instinct to get nearly every ball back over the net. They're also both able to switch to offence in a snap.

When Halep ended a 14-stroke point by pushing a backhand wide, Stephens owned the first set. She wheeled towards her box, which included US national football player Jozy Altidore, and shook a fist. Not much after that, Stephens broke to begin the second set, then held for a 2-0 lead. It appeared that she was on her way to improving to 7-0 in tournament finals.

And then, suddenly, everything changed. Stephens started missing. A double-fault here. A forehand into the net there. A backhand wide. Another long. Halep took 15 of 18 points and four games in a row.

From 4-all in the second, Halep grabbed seven games in a row to take that set and build a 5-0 edge in third.