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Carlos Alcaraz, a champion on clay and in heart.
There are matches that define eras. Others, rarer still, that transcend the sport. The 2025 Roland-Garros final between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner etched itself not only in record books—as the longest final in the history of the tournament (5 hours and 29 minutes)—but also in the memory of every soul who witnessed it, on-site or across the world.
It began with the tremors of doubt. Carlos Alcaraz, defending champion, was outplayed and outpaced. The Italian sculptor Jannik Sinner chiseled angles from the baseline with surgical precision, claiming the first two sets (6-4, 7-6). The Spanish prodigy was faltering. His famed smile had disappeared beneath a furrowed brow. But tennis is as much about the soul as it is about statistics. The boy from El Palmar has always been more than a statistic.
From the third set on, Alcaraz began to dig, claw, and believe. Each rally became a declaration. Each sliding backhand, each lunging forehand, a whisper to himself: not yet. He won the third 6-4. He clung to the fourth, edge of a cliff, surviving another tiebreak. And in a fifth set of raw survival and unyielding emotion, the two men played tennis that bordered on transcendental art.
And when Sinner’s final forehand struck the net, Alcaraz collapsed to the terre battue—not in celebration, but in release. Five hours and twenty-nine minutes of drama, emotion, endurance, and destiny. His face buried in the clay, tears hidden but not denied, it was not just a victory—it was a transformation.
For the first time in his young career, Carlos Alcaraz came back from two sets down to win. He became the first man since Nadal to win Roland-Garros back-to-back before the age of 23. And with that, he now owns five Grand Slam titles. The Parisian crowd roared for the new emperor of clay, a warrior whose path now leads inevitably toward legend.
This moment, this triumph, this pure emotion frozen in time, is now immortalized in an exclusive Carlos Alcaraz print. For admirers of the sport, this striking tennis poster of Alcaraz, stretched out on the court, eyes covered in disbelief, is more than a piece of décor—it is an heirloom of sporting greatness. Bring the magic of this unforgettable evening home with our Roland-Garros print—a stunning piece of tennis wall art that captures history, heart, and clay.
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➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
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➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Carlos Alcaraz, a champion on clay and in heart.
There are matches that define eras. Others, rarer still, that transcend the sport. The 2025 Roland-Garros final between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner etched itself not only in record books—as the longest final in the history of the tournament (5 hours and 29 minutes)—but also in the memory of every soul who witnessed it, on-site or across the world.
It began with the tremors of doubt. Carlos Alcaraz, defending champion, was outplayed and outpaced. The Italian sculptor Jannik Sinner chiseled angles from the baseline with surgical precision, claiming the first two sets (6-4, 7-6). The Spanish prodigy was faltering. His famed smile had disappeared beneath a furrowed brow. But tennis is as much about the soul as it is about statistics. The boy from El Palmar has always been more than a statistic.
From the third set on, Alcaraz began to dig, claw, and believe. Each rally became a declaration. Each sliding backhand, each lunging forehand, a whisper to himself: not yet. He won the third 6-4. He clung to the fourth, edge of a cliff, surviving another tiebreak. And in a fifth set of raw survival and unyielding emotion, the two men played tennis that bordered on transcendental art.
And when Sinner’s final forehand struck the net, Alcaraz collapsed to the terre battue—not in celebration, but in release. Five hours and twenty-nine minutes of drama, emotion, endurance, and destiny. His face buried in the clay, tears hidden but not denied, it was not just a victory—it was a transformation.
For the first time in his young career, Carlos Alcaraz came back from two sets down to win. He became the first man since Nadal to win Roland-Garros back-to-back before the age of 23. And with that, he now owns five Grand Slam titles. The Parisian crowd roared for the new emperor of clay, a warrior whose path now leads inevitably toward legend.
This moment, this triumph, this pure emotion frozen in time, is now immortalized in an exclusive Carlos Alcaraz print. For admirers of the sport, this striking tennis poster of Alcaraz, stretched out on the court, eyes covered in disbelief, is more than a piece of décor—it is an heirloom of sporting greatness. Bring the magic of this unforgettable evening home with our Roland-Garros print—a stunning piece of tennis wall art that captures history, heart, and clay.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Carlos Alcaraz, a champion on clay and in heart.
There are matches that define eras. Others, rarer still, that transcend the sport. The 2025 Roland-Garros final between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner etched itself not only in record books—as the longest final in the history of the tournament (5 hours and 29 minutes)—but also in the memory of every soul who witnessed it, on-site or across the world.
It began with the tremors of doubt. Carlos Alcaraz, defending champion, was outplayed and outpaced. The Italian sculptor Jannik Sinner chiseled angles from the baseline with surgical precision, claiming the first two sets (6-4, 7-6). The Spanish prodigy was faltering. His famed smile had disappeared beneath a furrowed brow. But tennis is as much about the soul as it is about statistics. The boy from El Palmar has always been more than a statistic.
From the third set on, Alcaraz began to dig, claw, and believe. Each rally became a declaration. Each sliding backhand, each lunging forehand, a whisper to himself: not yet. He won the third 6-4. He clung to the fourth, edge of a cliff, surviving another tiebreak. And in a fifth set of raw survival and unyielding emotion, the two men played tennis that bordered on transcendental art.
And when Sinner’s final forehand struck the net, Alcaraz collapsed to the terre battue—not in celebration, but in release. Five hours and twenty-nine minutes of drama, emotion, endurance, and destiny. His face buried in the clay, tears hidden but not denied, it was not just a victory—it was a transformation.
For the first time in his young career, Carlos Alcaraz came back from two sets down to win. He became the first man since Nadal to win Roland-Garros back-to-back before the age of 23. And with that, he now owns five Grand Slam titles. The Parisian crowd roared for the new emperor of clay, a warrior whose path now leads inevitably toward legend.
This moment, this triumph, this pure emotion frozen in time, is now immortalized in an exclusive Carlos Alcaraz print. For admirers of the sport, this striking tennis poster of Alcaraz, stretched out on the court, eyes covered in disbelief, is more than a piece of décor—it is an heirloom of sporting greatness. Bring the magic of this unforgettable evening home with our Roland-Garros print—a stunning piece of tennis wall art that captures history, heart, and clay.
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ABOUT THE PRINT
Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.
Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish
Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ HOW TO ORDER
Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.
Sizes:
A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)
A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)
A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)
---------------------------------------------------
➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED
---------------------------------------------------
➤ ADDITIONAL
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
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