Over the years, Wimbledon has witnessed some of the finest menâs singles finals.
As Spainâs Carlos Alcaraz takes on Serbiaâs Novak Djokovic in Wimbledon 2024 final on Sunday, Sportstar takes a look at five of the most epic summit clashes at the grass Major.
1980: Bjorn Borg beat John McEnroe 1â6, 7â5, 6â3, 6â7(16), 8â6
The fourth set tie-break in the 1980 menâs final was a classic, with every point shifting its importance from being match-point for Borg and set-point for McEnroe.
Borgâs stamina saw him through the final set, with the overwhelming effect of the tie-break spilling over to the fifth for McEnroe and the Swede won 1-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-7(16), 8-6.
2008: Rafael Nadal beat Roger Federer 6â4, 6â4, 6â7(5), 6â7(8), 9â7
There were two rain interruptions, one of more than an hour, the second of less than half an hour, but the pulse of the 2008 final was unrelenting. It might have gone either way in the fifth.
Finally, in what remained of the light at quarter past nine, Nadal beat Federer 6-4, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-7(8), 9â7 to become the first man since Bjorn Borg in 1980 to win the French Open and Wimbledon back to back.
2009: Roger Federer beat Andy Roddick 5â7, 7â6(6), 7â6(5), 3â6, 16â14
It certainly wasnât vintage Federer. He could not find a way through on the Roddick serve until the matchâs denouement, when the American cracked. But what a startling match it proved to be, with Roddick playing as well as he ever would at Wimbledon yet still finding his best was not enough to master the master.
A third final defeat to Federer would be his last grand slam title match, but Roddick came so close, despairingly so as the marathon fifth set became unbearably tense, that it was impossible not to sympathise. For Federer, it was a record-breaking 15th grand slam win, beating Samprasâ haul.
2019: Novak Djokovic beat Roger Federer 7â6(5), 1â6, 7â6(4), 4â6, 13â12(3)
In the battle of wills that lasted four hours and 55 minutes, Djokovic rose from the dead during the nearly two-hour final set, saving two match-points with Federer serving at 8-7.
Then at 11-11, he fended off two break points â the second with a daring charge to the net â to drag the set to the newly introduced fifth-set tiebreaker. Once there, it seemed like familiar territory, for he had won the two early tiebreakers, as he scampered home losing just three points.
2023: Carlos Alcaraz beat Novak Djokovic 1â6, 7â6(6), 1â6, 3â6, 6â4
Alcaraz put aside a poor start and surged down the stretch to end Djokovicâs 34-match winning streak at the All England Club by edging him 1-6, 7-6(6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 in an engaging, back-and-forth final.
The No. 1-ranked Alcaraz prevented No. 2 Djokovic from collecting what would have been a record-tying eighth title, and fifth in a row, at the grass-court tournament.
Source Agencies