Wimbledon men’s singles final between Novak Djokovic and Matteo Berrettini held many firsts and had a couple of records beckoning. While Djokovic triumphed over Italian Berrettini in four sets and took home a sixth Wimbledon title, pictures shared on the official handle of Wimbledon showed the special moments just before the match started.

Before the start of the play, the players, the match umpire and a 13-year-old who performed the coin toss for the final clicked a photograph together. This photo can be dubbed as a very special one.

For one, Djokovic was chasing a record-equalling Grand Slam in the final. His opponent, Berrettini, was gunning to be the first Italian to lift the elusive title. And the umpire for the match, Marija Cicak, was the first woman umpire to officiate the Wimbledon men’s singles final.

The 13-year-old, who was identified as Sean Seresinhe by Wimbledon, represented a youth mental health charity in London.

As for Cicak, she became the first woman to officiate the men’s final in the tournament history of 130 years. 

Cicak’s announcement was made on Saturday. She is a gold badge chair umpire and a member of the WTA Elite Team since 2012.

She was the chair umpire for the 2014 Wimbledon women’s final and also the umpire for the women’s double final three years later. She has also officiated the women’s singles gold medal match at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

Before this, she officiated at the 2014 Wimbledon women’s final between Petra Kvitova and Eugenie Bouchard.

According to WTA, Cicak earned her first officiating certification to work at national events at age 15.

“I was just working events on lines or in the chair, and would play low-level tournaments for myself, just for fun, and I really enjoyed it,” she had said.

Following this, she got a gold badge at the end of the 2011 season and joined the WTA’s team of umpires full-time the next year.

In 2015, Eva Asderaki-Moore and she made history as they took charge of the women’s and men’s singles finals at the tournament for the first time.

As for Djokovic, his win put him three-quarters of the way to the first calendar Grand Slam of all four majors since 1969.

Should he win a fourth title in New York in September, he will become just the third man in history after Don Budge (1938) and Rod Laver (1962 and 1969) to complete the calendar Grand Slam.