Felix Overwhelms Manarino in a One-Sided First Set

Auger-Aliassime started the final in devastating fashion. In the opening game of the match, he broke Manarino without dropping a single point, then immediately confirmed the break with another flawless service game.

Manarino was completely unable to put pressure on Felix’s serve. He did not earn a single break point throughout the set, while Felix struck again with another break to build a commanding advantage.

With two breaks of serve, Auger-Aliassime closed the first set 6–3, fully in control.

The statistics underline Felix’s dominance:

  • Winners: 15 for Auger-Aliassime
  • Winners: only 5 for Manarino

Manarino Pushes Back, but Felix Decides the Tiebreak

The second set painted a very different picture. Manarino raised his level significantly and became a far more competitive opponent.

Up to 5–4 in favor of Felix, neither player faced a break point. At that moment, Auger-Aliassime earned one break point, which also served as a match point, but failed to convert.

Both players then held serve once more, sending the set into a tiebreak.

The tiebreak remained evenly balanced until 5–4 for Felix. At that stage, Manarino served twice — and lost both service points. Auger-Aliassime capitalized immediately, winning the tiebreak and closing out the match 2–0.


Auger-Aliassime Justifies His Status as Top Seed

With this victory, Felix Auger-Aliassime confirmed his class and fully justified his status as the No. 1 seed of the tournament.

The Canadian lifted the Montpellier trophy after a composed and authoritative performance, while Manarino, despite a strong second set, was unable to turn the momentum in his favor.

The final was preceded by two thrilling semifinals:
👉 Manarino vs Damm and Auger-Aliassime vs Droguet

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