Brazilian teenager João Fonseca produced the defining win of his young career on Friday, rallying from two sets down to stun Novak Djokovic 4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 7-5 in the third round of the French Open and send the 24-time Grand Slam champion crashing out of Roland-Garros.
The 19-year-old’s victory on Court Philippe-Chatrier ended Djokovic’s pursuit of a record-extending 25th major title and marked the Serb’s earliest exit in Paris since 2009 — the year before Fonseca turned three. It was Fonseca’s first career win over a top-10 opponent, having arrived with a 1-6 record against the game’s elite and no previous wins over a top-10 player on clay.
Djokovic appeared in command early, taking the first two sets 6-4, 6-4 and looking on course for a routine passage into the second week. The match turned in the third, when Fonseca began to find the range on his thunderous groundstrokes and broke clear to take it 6-3. The Brazilian leveled the match in a tight fourth set and then held his nerve through a tense decider. Djokovic led 5-4 and stood two games from victory, but was unable to serve out the match, and Fonseca surged to the finish, sealing the upset with three consecutive aces before sinking into his chair in disbelief.
The afternoon heat in Paris appeared to take a heavy toll on the 39-year-old Djokovic, who repeatedly shook out his arm and labored through extended rallies as his opponent kept swinging freely. The Serb, who had reached the third round despite limited clay-court preparation following an injury-disrupted spring, left the court to a prolonged ovation amid speculation over whether it could prove his final appearance at Roland-Garros.
The result blows the men’s draw wide open. With world No. 1 Jannik Sinner already eliminated earlier in the week and Carlos Alcaraz absent through a wrist injury, the tournament has now lost the three biggest names in the men’s game — and South American players have been central to the upheaval. Argentina’s Juan Manuel Cerúndolo accounted for Sinner; Fonseca has now removed Djokovic, leaving a field in which a first-time major champion looks increasingly likely.
For Fonseca, the breakthrough caps a remarkable fortnight. The 28th seed and first Brazilian man seeded at Roland-Garros since Thomaz Bellucci in 2011, he had already come from two sets down once this week, recovering to beat Croatia’s Dino Prizmic in the second round. A former U.S. Open junior champion and 2024 Next Gen Finals winner with tour-level titles already to his name, he now reaches the fourth round of a Grand Slam for the first time, confirming a talent many had long projected for the very top of the game.





