Jo-Wilfried Tsonga won his first ATP Tour title since 2017 with a 6-4 6-2 victory over Pierre-Hugues Herbert at the Open Sud de France.
Tsonga was contesting his first final since the Vienna Open of October 2017 - a match that came a week after he last sampled glory at the European Open in Antwerp.
The former world number five saw his 2018 season wrecked by injury but found form in Montpellier, beating Gilles Simon and Jeremy Chardy on his way to the final.
And the 33-year-old was a comfortable straight-sets victor over Herbert - a run of five games across the end of the first set and the beginning of the second holding the key.
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A break late in the opener left Tsonga serving for the set and he maintained that momentum to go a break up in the second.
Tsonga then opened up a 5-1 lead and the match was beyond Herbert.
Guess who's back @tsonga7 is the 2019 @OpenSuddeFrance champion - his 17th #ATPTour title
— ATP Tour (@ATP_Tour) February 10, 2019
@TennisTV pic.twitter.com/ZE8MjcrGSb
Meanwhile, Daniil Medvedev claimed victory in the final of the Sofia Open on Sunday, beating Marton Fucsovics 6-4 6-3.
Medvedev was contesting his second ATP Tour final of 2019, having lost to Kei Nishikori at the Brisbane International last month.
But the Russian enjoyed a change of fortunes this time around as he picked up his fourth career title in straight sets.
Medvedev put Fucsovics under pressure early on and had squandered three break points by the time he made one stick to go 4-3 in front.
Fucsovics hit back immediately, but Medvedev regained his advantage in the next and went on to clinch the opener.
The next breakthrough came early in the second set and Medvedev survived two break points in the sixth game, as Fucsovics' best chance at a fightback slipped from his grasp.
Medvedev finished the job with a break to love.