Whatever the result of tomorrow's final between Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic, two things seem certain: We will never again see such dominance of a single event by an individual and the rivalry between Nadal and Roger Federer is over.
Remember where you were in the autumn of 2005? Tana Umaga was still All Blacks captain, Barack Obama was an unknown Illinois senator and Brian McClennan was the controversial choice as new Kiwis coach. And an 18-year-old Nadal turned up in Paris as one of the players to watch. Ranked 50 in the world when he played in Auckland earlier that year, wins in Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Rome had seen his ranking skyrocket to five by the time the French Open started.
In his first match on the Roland Garros clay, he dispatched German Lars Burgsmuller, the world 96, 6-1 7-6 (4) 6-1. Nadal got stronger with every round, beating Federer in the semifinals and unseeded Argentinian Mariano Puerta in the final.
He has won 51 of 52 matches in Paris - his only defeat coming in 2009 to Swede Robin Soderling.
Over that span, his victims have included Lleyton Hewitt (four times), Soderling (twice), David Ferrer (twice), Djokovic (three times), Juan Martin Del Potro, as well as Federer on five occasions - including three finals.