Some wins are remembered for the scoreline. JoĂŁo Fonsecaâs victory over Novak Djokovic may be remembered for the date as well.
The five-set comeback was already a major Roland Garros story. The coincidence around it makes it feel even more pointed for Brazilian tennis.
For the third time this century, 29 May has framed a major Brazilian menâs moment in Paris. That is not proof of destiny, but it is a powerful sporting pattern.
Fonseca turned 29 May into another Brazilian tennis marker
JoĂŁo Fonseca beat Novak Djokovic in the third round of Roland Garros, coming from two sets down to win 4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 7-5.
The match stands on its own because of the comeback. It becomes more striking because Brazilian tennis has been here before, on the same date, at the same tournament.
On 29 May 2004, Gustavo Kuerten beat Roger Federer at Roland Garros, with Federer already world number one.
On 29 May 2010, Thomaz Bellucci beat Ivan Ljubicic to reach the fourth round in Paris.
The coincidence gives the story its journalistic edge
The point is not that Fonseca has become Guga, or that one date explains anything. Sport is rarely that neat.
But journalism is often about recognising when facts line up in a way readers will remember. This one does.
Kuerten was already a three-time Roland Garros champion. Bellucciâs run became a Brazilian marker after he won in straight sets against Ljubicic.
Fonseca now joins that same 29 May thread as the first Brazilian man since Bellucci to reach the second week of a Grand Slam.
That is why this result has a wider feel. It is not mythmaking. It is a rare, clean coincidence linking three Brazilian stories across one Roland Garros century.
Read more:
O que achou dessa notĂcia? Deixe um comentĂĄrio abaixo e/ou compartilhe em suas redes sociais. Assim conseguiremos informar mais pessoas sobre o que acontece no mundo do tĂȘnis!
Esta notĂcia foi originalmente publicada em:
Fonte original
