Paris, Nov 03: Tim Henman wins Paris Masters. Tim Henman capped the finest week of his tennis career by winning the Paris Masters title with a 6-2 7-6 7-6 defeat of Romania's Andrei Pavel on Sunday (November 2). The Briton's victory was his first in a Masters Series event, earned him a cheque of 450,000 euros (526,800 U.S. dollars) and re-established the 29-year-old among the world's top players. Henman, totally in command in the first set of a lacklustre final, appeared to be cruising midway through the second set before a series of unforced errors allowed Pavel to break back to 5-5 and force a tiebreak. Up 6-4 in the tiebreak Henman, who has a habit of collapsing under the pressure of the big occasion, wasted his first set point with a double fault and then the second. Pavel slammed his racket to the ground in frustration when a Henman volley earned the Briton his third set point and this time he made the most of it, winning the tiebreak 8-6.


With Pavel serving with more vigour and stepping into Henman's delivery, the third set was evenly matched until the tiebreak which Henman ran away with 7-2 to clinch the title.


It was the first Masters Series final for seven years between two unseeded players.


Henman lost just one set in six matches and had played superb serve-volley tennis to beat Wimbledon champion Roger Federer in the quarter-finals and newly-crowned world number one Andy Roddick in the semis.


He has struggled to find his best form following shoulder surgery 12 months ago but he said this week he had never played as consistently well in his career.


Once ranked as high as fourth, he had slipped as low as 42 but Sunday's title returns Henman to the top 15.


Pavel, out for six months this year with wrist and back injuries, did not win a match in his first eight tournaments of 2003 and appeared exhausted in the first set after his three-set semi-final defeat of 14th seed Jiri Novak.


As Henman faltered, he charged the net in the second set with great success but was never able to capitalise fully on Henman's drop in performance.


Henman said afterwards: "The quality of opponents that I've beaten, there's no question it's been the best week of my tennis life. But, you know, I feel that I've played some great tennis but there's no reason why I can't play like this more often. So I don't want this to be the exception, I want this to become more and more normal and I think if I do that then my ranking's only going to go in one direction."


The nine Masters Series tournaments are ranked below the four Grand Slams, none of which Henman has won.


Bureau Report