French Open recap Day 1: An American milestone and upset in the same match

0
3

Follow The Athletic’s French Open coverage

Welcome to the French Open briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories on each day of the tournament.

On Day 1, a landmark Roland Garros moment for the U.S. was double-edged, a rising talent made a statement and a Frenchman was almost caught short on the court.

Advertisement

How did American men’s tennis take a step forward?

American men logged a nifty milestone in Paris Sunday. Wild card Nishesh Basavareddy won his first-round match 7-6(5), 7-6(5), 6-7(9), 6-1, to notch the first victory for an American man over a top-10 opponent at the French Open since 2000.

The only problem? Basavareddy’s opponent was a compatriot: No. 7 seed Taylor Fritz.

Their match was just Fritz’s second since returning from a two-month stint rehabbing chronic tendinitis in his knee. Returning on red clay, Fritz’s worst surface, was always going to be a challenge, and 21-year-old Basavareddy made the most of Fritz’s rustiness.

Advertisement

Basavareddy fed Fritz a steady diet of drop shots that gave the 28-year-old no rhythm to work with and had him visibly frustrated on court.

“Typically when someone is drop-shotting me too much, I kind of just tell myself, ‘OK, I need to hit the ball deeper,” Fritz said in his news conference.

“He was hitting insane drop shots, like, off balls that were landing on the baseline. He killed me with that, and there’s not really much I can do about it.”

Fritz said he felt he played better than last year, which saw another first-round loss to Germany’s Daniel Altmaier. A bonus of his early exit is that he’ll get to go home and focus more on strengthening his knee ahead of the grass court season, where the slippery surface could be tricky.

Advertisement

Basavareddy, meanwhile, earned his first top-10 victory — and the crowd’s affection along the way. They chanted his name at different times throughout the match, encouraging the underdog and giving him a standing ovation when he won. The applause reached fever-pitch when Basavareddy thanked the crowd in French during his winner’s speech.

He picked up the language not during the two years he spent at Stanford, but through five months of lessons when Frenchman Gilles Cervara was his coach earlier this year. He seems to be a quick study.

— Ava Wallace 

How did Hailey Baptiste make a statement?

At this French Open, there are two surefire ways of seeing that Hailey Baptiste is on the rise.

Advertisement

She is seeded for the first time at a Grand Slam, for one.

The other? After years of buying her match clothes from Nike herself, the sports-apparel behemoth signed the 24-year-old to a sponsorship.

Baptiste wore the swoosh well Sunday, rescuing her first-round match against 2021 French Open and 2024 Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejčíková from two match points down, to win 6-7(7), 7-6(6), 6-2, in 2 hours and 53 minutes of unseasonably hot, sticky weather.

Baptiste’s aggression and bold shotmaking was a key to the match, same as it was last month at the Madrid Open, when she saved six match points to beat world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka.

Advertisement

The American was a break down in the second set before she regained focus and raised her energy, but Krejčíková saved a pair of set points to force a tiebreak. Then, from double-match-point up, Krejčíková whiffed a pair of forehands back-to-back to hand Baptiste an escape path, and the American took the third set with ease.

“I just refuse to, you know, let myself be the reason that I lose a match,” Baptiste said in a news conference. “I’m really focusing on being mentally strong and very positive even in the very tight, close moments.”

Baptiste has plenty of reasons to be positive lately. Her deal with Nike, first reported by Hard Court, is a career milestone that means she will no longer be shelling out for clothes herself (or, as she said Sunday, by using a connection through her good buddy Frances Tiafoe, who was a Nike athlete for years before he signed on with Lululemon).

“I actually didn’t have any kind of deal with them before. I was just buying clothes,” Baptiste said.

Advertisement

“But, yeah, I mean, it’s just a brand that I really love and I’ve always worn since I was younger. It’s just what I was comfortable in. Being with them officially now is very special to me, and it’s something — it was a big goal of mine this year that I worked for it, and I earned it. So I’m really happy about it.”

Her win Sunday was a nice bit of news for the brand, after there was some recurring hubbub about Aryna Sabalenka’s kits. World No. 88 Oksana Selekhmeteva was playing her first-round match against Marta Kostyuk in the same dress Aryna Sabalenka is meant to wear at Roland Garros. Fans perceived it as the latest of an ongoing series of slights from Nike toward Sabalenka that another player debuted the look first, but Sabalenka’s dress is available for any player to purchase online.

— Ava Wallace

What should a tennis player do when nature calls?

For the second Grand Slam running, Day 1 saw a player sprinting off court to use the toilet.

Advertisement

At the Australian Open, Italy’s Flavio Cobolli was hampered by what he called “watery diarrhea” during an upset defeat to Arthur Fery. Sunday at Roland Garros, the French world No. 135 Arthur Géa was even more direct early in a 6-3, 7-6(3), 6-0 loss to No. 13 seed Karen Khachanov.

Down 4-1 in the first set, Géa informed the umpire that he desperately needed the toilet, and was worried what might happen if he didn’t leave the court. He chose to express that need more directly to the chair umpire, after first checking if he spoke French.

“I have the s–––s,” Géa said in French. “I need to go to the toilets, I can’t move anymore. I’m going to s––– on the court.”

Normally, players can only leave the court for a medical issue during a change of ends at the end of a set, or after an odd number of games has been completed. With the scoreline about to tick over to either 4-2 or 5-1, Géa appeared unable to relieve himself.

Advertisement

But having held for 4-2 after calling for the doctor, Géa ran off court as quickly as he could, returning a few minutes later.

On a hot day pushing 90 degrees fahrenheit, Géa said in a news conference that he had felt unwell earlier that morning.

“During the match it was even worse, because it was a bit hot, and I had to go to the toilet really quick. They didn’t allow it, so I was asking the referee because I was really, really bad, and then the doctor came and obviously I could go,” Géa said in a post-match news conference.

Géa was told he could leave at the unusual time, he said, “because it’s medical circumstances.” He was given medicine to stop him needing to go again, which helped but left him with stomach pain.

Advertisement

It’s surely a coincidence that two consecutive Slams start this way. Or perhaps it is not. In a clip posted by Ultimate Tennis Showdown, Adrian Mannarino, Richard Gasquet and David Goffin discuss how the first day of a major is often characterized by long queues of nervous players waiting to use the toilet.

Khachanov, who initially looked baffled by what was going on when Gea left the court, will play Argentina’s Marco Trungelliti in the second round Wednesday.

— Charlie Eccleshare 

Other notable results on Day 1:

Alexander Zverev (2) opened his campaign with a resoundingly comfortable 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 win over Benjamin Bonzi

Advertisement

Mirra Andreeva (8) had a similarly smooth start, cruising past another French player, wild card Fiona Ferro, 6-3, 6-3.

Novak Djokovic (3) recovered from losing the opening set against the big-serving Giovanni Mpetshi Perricardto win 5-7, 7-5, 6-1, 6-4.

Emma Raducanu‘s return to tennis was set to be rusty, and so it proved. She fell in a 6-0, 7-6(4) defeat against Argentina’s Solana Sierra

João Fonseca (28) and Jakub Menšík (26) both dealt with the potentially dangerous combination of a lower-ranked French player and Court Simonne-Mathieu’s at-times rabid crowd. Fonseca beat Luka Pavlovic 7-6(6), 6-4, 6-2, while Menšík took down Titouan Droguet.

Advertisement

Clara Tauson (21) suffered a surprise defeat to Daria Snigur, who flipped the script after losing the opening set to win 3-6, 7-5, 6-2.

Drop Shots

🏆 Contenders, entertainers, and stars bowing out: The players to watch at the French Open.

👁️ Roland Garros is sticking with tradition, so line judges — and umpires checking ball marks — are back.

🪧 Why tennis stars held a one-day media protest ahead of the tournament …

😡 … And why another somehow got away with kicking his racket into the crowd at a tournament in Germany.

🤕 Carlos Alcaraz’s absence hangs over Roland Garros, and his injury is one players fear most.

Advertisement

Up next: First round continues

🎾 Women’s singles: Emerson Jones (WC) vs. Iga Świątek (3)

6 a.m. ET on TNT, Max

Emerson Jones could be forgiven for feeling a little unlucky. The highly rated Australian has been qualifying for Grand Slams 2024, and has fallen in the final round twice. And when the 17-year-old has received a wild card — this time thanks to an agreement between Tennis Australia and the French Tennis Federation — she has had the toughest draws imaginable. Two-time Grand Slam champion Elena Rybakina at last year’s Australian Open. Top-10 talent Victoria Mboko at this year’s. And now Iga Świątek, the four-time French Open champion who is returning to form and will be playing in perfect conditions for her game.

Advertisement

🎾 Women’s singles: Elina Svitolina (7) vs. Anna Bondár

8 a.m. ET on Max

Elina Svitolina is having a wonderful 2026. She reached the Australian Open semifinals with a statement victory over Coco Gauff, she won the Italian Open earlier this month, and she has climbed back into the top 10. She has lost just seven matches on the year, and only one player has beaten her twice in a row since last year’s U.S. Open: Anna Bondár, of Hungary. The last win came at the Madrid Open, and the high temperatures at the French Open this year will make conditions closer to that event than they might be normally.

🎾 Men’s singles: Ignacio Buse vs. Andrey Rublev (11)

11 a.m. ET on Max

Circle this and mark it for an upset. Buse, the 22-year-old Peruvian, arrives at his first French Open on the back of winning the biggest title of his career, at the Hamburg Open in Germany. His front-foot, aggressive tennis and ability to switch it up and grind could trouble Rublev. The Russian No. 11 seed had a clay run of his own at the Barcelona Open in April, but also fell early at two events during the clay-court swing.

Advertisement

🎾 Men’s singles: Hugo Gaston (WC) vs. Gaël Monfils (WC)

2:15 p.m ET on TNT

The time has come. Gaël Monfils, the statesman and showman of tennis in France, will walk on to Court Philippe-Chatrier under the lights for what could be his last match at his home tournament. The 39-year-old’s opponent, Hugo Gaston, also loves a trick shot and some cheek, so there should be plenty of fun, but also emotion. Monfils means more to French tennis than any other active player, and his late-night resurrections on this court are part of the French Open’s recent popular history.

French Open women’s draw 2026

First Round

Advertisement

Second Round

Third Round

Fourth Round

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Finals

🇧🇾

1

A. Sabalenka

 

🇪🇸

J. Bouzas Maneiro

 

🇨🇿

L. Fruhvirtová (Q)

 

🇫🇷

E. Jacquemot

 

🇦🇺

D. Kasatkina

 

🇹🇷

Z. Sönmez

 

🇨🇭

S. Bandecchi (Q)

 

🇪🇸

31

C. Bucşa

 

🇺🇸

17

I. Jović

 

🇵🇭

A. Eala

 

🇺🇸

E. Navarro

 

🇮🇩

J. Tjen

 

🇭🇷

D. Vekić

 

🇫🇷

A. Tubello (WC)

 

🇩🇪

L. Siegemund

 

🇯🇵

16

N. Osaka

 

🇨🇦

9

V. Mboko

 

🇨🇿

N. Bartůňková

 

🇨🇭

S. Waltert

 

🇨🇿

K. Siniaková

 

🇭🇷

A. Ružić

 

🇺🇸

A. Krueger (Q)

 

🇧🇪

H. Vandewinkel

 

🇺🇸

19

M. Keys

 

🇷🇺

25

D. Shnaider

 

Advertisement

🇲🇽

R. Zarazúa

 

🇨🇳

H. Guo (Q)

 

🇺🇸

M. Kessler

 

🇷🇺

E. Pridankina (Q)

 

🇺🇦

O. Oliynykova

 

🇦🇺

K. Birrell

 

🇺🇸

5

J. Pegula

 

🇺🇸

4

C. Gauff

 

🇺🇸

T. Townsend

 

🇭🇺

D. Gálfi

 

🇪🇬

M. Sherif (Q)

 

🇺🇸

A. Urhobo (WC)

 

🇬🇧

K. Boulter

 

🇦🇺

M. Joint

 

🇦🇹

28

A. Potapova

 

🇷🇺

22

A. Kalinskaya

 

🇫🇷

L. Boisson

 

🇷🇺

A. Korneeva (Q)

 

🇮🇹

E. Cocciaretto

 

🇦🇺

T. Gibson

 

🇰🇿

Y. Putintseva

 

🇨🇴

C. Osorio

 

🇷🇺

14

E. Alexandrova

 

🇨🇿

12

L. Nosková

 

🇬🇷

M. Sakkari

 

🇺🇸

C. Liu (Q)

 

🇯🇵

M. Uchijima

 

🇵🇱

M. Chwalinska (Q)

Advertisement

 

🇨🇳

Q. Zheng

 

🇩🇪

T. Maria

 

🇧🇪

23

E. Mertens

 

🇺🇸

30

A. Li

 

🇨🇳

S. Zhang

 

🇺🇦

A. Kalinina

 

🇫🇷

D. Parry

 

🇦🇹

J. Grabher

 

🇸🇰

R. Šramková (Q)

 

🇫🇷

T. Rajaonah Rakotomanga (WC)

 

🇺🇸

6

A. Anisimova

 

🇺🇦

7

E. Svitolina

 

🇭🇺

A. Bondár

 

🇪🇸

K. Quevedo (Q)

 

🇫🇷

L. Jeanjean (WC)

 

🇪🇸

S. Sorribes Tormo

4  2 

🇩🇪

T. Korpatsch

6  6 

🇦🇹

L. Tagger

3  6  4 

🇨🇳

32

X. Wang

6  3  6 

🇩🇰

21

C. Tauson

6  5  2 

🇺🇦

D. Snigur

3  7  6 

🇺🇸

S. Kenin

3  3 

🇺🇸

P. Stearns

Advertisement

6  6 

🇦🇺

A. Tomljanović

6  65 3 

🇺🇸

C. McNally

3  7  6 

🇦🇹

S. Kraus (Q)

2  3 

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

6  6 

🇺🇦

15

M. Kostyuk

6  6 

🇪🇸

O. Selekhmeteva

2  3 

🇺🇸

K. Volynets

6  6 

🇫🇷

C. Burel (WC)

3  1 

🇭🇺

P. Udvardy

 

🇨🇭

V. Golubic

 

🇺🇸

A. Parks

 

🇨🇦

24

L. Fernandez

 

🇱🇻

29

J. Ostapenko

 

🇩🇪

E. Seidel

 

🇨🇿

T. Valentová

7  4  69

🇵🇱

M. Linette

5  6  7 

🇨🇿

S. Bejlek

6  6 

🇺🇸

S. Stephens (Q)

3  2 

🇦🇺

E. Jones (WC)

 

🇵🇱

3

I. Świątek

 

🇷🇺

8

M. Andreeva

Advertisement

6  6 

🇫🇷

F. Ferro (WC)

3  3 

🇪🇸

M. Bassols Ribera (Q)

6  6 

🇨🇴

E. Arango

3  4 

🇬🇧

F. Jones

1  7  6 

🇧🇷

B. Haddad Maia

6  64 2 

🇮🇹

L. Bronzetti (Q)

3  1 

🇨🇿

27

M. Bouzková

6  6 

🇷🇺

20

L. Samsonova

 

🇨🇭

J. Teichmann

 

🇵🇱

M. Fręch

7  2 

🇷🇴

E. Ruse (RET)

65 1 

🇺🇿

K. Rakhimova

 

🇷🇴

J. Cristian

 

🇷🇺

A. Zakharova

 

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

 

🇮🇹

13

J. Paolini

 

🇺🇦

D. Yastremska

 

🇬🇧

E. Raducanu

0  64

🇦🇷

S. Sierra

6  7 

🇭🇷

P. Marčinko

 

🇩🇪

E. Lys

 

🇫🇷

K. Efremova (WC)

3  1 

Advertisement

🇷🇴

18

S. Cîrstea

6  6 

🇺🇸

26

H. Baptiste

67 7  6 

🇨🇿

B. Krejčíková

7  66 2 

🇲🇪

D. Kovinić

3  1 

🇨🇳

X. Wang (Q)

6  6 

🇷🇺

A. Blinkova

3  1 

🇺🇦

Y. Starodubtseva

6  6 

🇸🇮

V. Erjavec

 

🇰🇿

2

E. Rybakina

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

🇩🇪

T. Korpatsch

 

🇨🇳

32

X. Wang

 

🇺🇦

D. Snigur

 

🇺🇸

P. Stearns

 

🇺🇸

C. McNally

 

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

 

🇺🇦

15

M. Kostyuk

 

🇺🇸

K. Volynets

 

.

 

.

 

🇵🇱

M. Linette

 

🇨🇿

S. Bejlek

 

.

 

.

 

🇷🇺

8

M. Andreeva

 

🇪🇸

M. Bassols Ribera (Q)

 

🇬🇧

F. Jones

 

🇨🇿

27

M. Bouzková

 

.

 

🇵🇱

M. Fręch

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

🇦🇷

S. Sierra

 

.

 

🇷🇴

18

S. Cîrstea

 

🇺🇸

26

H. Baptiste

 

.

 

🇺🇦

Y. Starodubtseva

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

French Open men’s draw 2026

First Round

Second Round

Third Round

Fourth Round

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Finals

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

 

🇫🇷

C. Tabur (WC)

 

🇬🇧

J. Fearnley

 

🇦🇷

J. Cerúndolo

 

🇪🇸

M. Landaluce

 

🇧🇴

J. Prado Angelo (Q)

 

🇨🇿

V. Kopřiva

 

🇫🇷

30

C. Moutet

 

🇫🇷

22

A. Rinderknech

 

🇦🇹

J. Rodionov (Q)

 

🇭🇺

M. Fucsovics

 

🇮🇹

M. Berrettini

 

🇺🇸

E. Quinn

 

🇦🇷

F. Comesaña

 

🇦🇹

S. Ofner

 

🇮🇹

14

L. Darderi

 

🇰🇿

9

A. Bublik

 

🇩🇪

J. Struff

 

🇵🇹

J. Faria (Q)

 

🇨🇦

D. Shapovalov

 

🇪🇸

J. Munar

 

🇵🇱

H. Hurkacz

 

🇺🇸

E. Spizzirri

 

🇺🇸

19

F. Tiafoe

 

🇳🇱

29

T. Griekspoor

 

🇮🇹

M. Arnaldi

 

🇫🇷

A. Muller

 

🇬🇷

S. Tsitsipas

 

🇧🇪

R. Collignon

 

🇦🇺

A. Vukic

 

🇪🇸

D. Mérida

 

🇺🇸

5

B. Shelton

 

🇨🇦

4

F. Auger-Aliassime

 

🇩🇪

D. Altmaier

 

🇦🇷

S. Báez

 

🇦🇷

R. Burruchaga

 

🇫🇷

L. van Assche

 

🇺🇸

P. Kypson

 

🇪🇸

R. Bautista Agut

 

🇺🇸

31

B. Nakashima

 

🇬🇧

20

C. Norrie

 

🇵🇾

A. Vallejo

 

🇭🇷

M. Čilić

 

🇫🇷

M. Kouamé (WC)

 

🇨🇱

A. Tabilo

 

🇵🇱

K. Majchrzak

 

🇫🇷

T. Faurel (Q)

 

🇲🇨

16

V. Vacherot

 

🇮🇹

10

F. Cobolli

 

🇮🇹

A. Pellegrino (Q)

 

🇨🇳

Y. Wu

 

🇺🇸

M. Giron

 

🇦🇷

F. Díaz Acosta (Q)

 

🇨🇳

Z. Zhang

 

🇨🇱

C. Garín

 

🇺🇸

18

L. Tien

 

🇦🇷

25

F. Cerúndolo

 

🇳🇱

B. van de Zandschulp

 

🇫🇷

H. Gaston (WC)

 

🇫🇷

G. Monfils (WC)

 

🇦🇺

A. Popyrin

 

🇺🇸

Z. Svajda

 

🇦🇺

A. Walton

 

🇷🇺

6

D. Medvedev

 

🇦🇺

8

A. de Minaur

 

🇬🇧

T. Samuel (Q)

 

🇧🇪

A. Blockx

6  6  6 

🇭🇰

C. Wong (LL)

3  4  2 

🇦🇷

M. Navone

 

🇺🇸

J. Brooksby

 

🇫🇷

T. Droguet (WC)

3  2  4 

🇨🇿

26

J. Menšík

6  6  6 

🇦🇷

23

T. Etcheverry

3  4  2 

🇵🇹

N. Borges

6  6  6 

🇷🇸

M. Kecmanović

7  6  6 

🇭🇺

F. Marozsán

6  3  4 

🇺🇸

E. Nava (Q)

 

🇦🇷

C. Ugo Carabelli

 

🇵🇪

I. Buse

 

🇷🇺

11

A. Rublev

 

🇳🇴

15

C. Ruud

 

🇷🇺

R. Safiullin (Q)

 

🇷🇸

H. Medjedovic

6  6  61 6 

🇩🇪

Y. Hanfmann

3  4  7  4 

🇮🇹

L. Sonego

7  5  6  1  6 

🇫🇷

P. Herbert (Q)

63 7  2  6  4 

🇦🇺

R. Hijikata

 

🇺🇸

24

T. Paul

 

🇧🇷

28

J. Fonseca

7  6  6 

🇫🇷

L. Pavlovic (Q)

66 4  2 

🇺🇸

M. Zheng (Q)

1  1  3 

🇭🇷

D. Prižmić

6  6  6 

🇧🇴

H. Dellien (Q)

4  2  2 

🇫🇷

V. Royer

6  6  6 

🇫🇷

G. Mpetshi Perricard

7  5  1  4 

🇷🇸

3

N. Djokovic

5  7  6  6 

🇺🇸

7

T. Fritz

65 65 7  1 

🇺🇸

N. Basavareddy (WC)

7  7  69 6 

🇰🇿

A. Shevchenko

 

🇺🇸

A. Michelsen

 

🇦🇺

J. Duckworth

6  4 

🇨🇦

G. Diallo (RET)

3  1 

🇺🇸

A. Kovacevic

 

🇪🇸

27

R. Jódar

 

🇪🇸

21

A. Davidovich Fokina

63 6  2  7  6 

🇧🇦

D. Džumhur

7  3  6  5  3 

🇪🇸

P. Llamas Ruiz (Q)

3  66 7  0 

🇦🇷

T. Tirante

6  7  65 6 

🇦🇺

T. Kokkinakis

 

🇫🇷

T. Atmane

 

🇪🇸

P. Carreño Busta

 

🇨🇿

12

J. Lehečka

 

🇷🇺

13

K. Khachanov

6  7  6 

🇫🇷

A. Géa

3  65 0 

🇫🇷

K. Jacquet (Q)

4  2  2 

🇦🇷

M. Trungelliti

6  6  6 

🇮🇹

F. Cina (Q)

3  6  6  66 6 

🇺🇸

R. Opelka

6  4  2  7  4 

🇨🇭

S. Wawrinka (WC)

 

🇳🇱

J. de Jong (LL)

 

🇫🇷

32

U. Humbert

 

🇫🇷

A. Mannarino

 

🇫🇷

Q. Halys

6  7  6 

🇮🇹

M. Bellucci

3  64 3 

🇨🇿

T. Macháč

6  6  6 

🇧🇪

Z. Bergs

4  4  3 

🇫🇷

B. Bonzi

3  4  2 

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

6  6  6 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

🇧🇪

A. Blockx

 

.

 

🇨🇿

26

J. Menšík

 

🇵🇹

N. Borges

 

🇷🇸

M. Kecmanović

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

🇷🇸

H. Medjedovic

 

🇮🇹

L. Sonego

 

.

 

🇧🇷

28

J. Fonseca

 

🇭🇷

D. Prižmić

 

🇫🇷

V. Royer

 

🇷🇸

N. Djokovic

 

🇺🇸

N. Basavareddy (WC)

 

.

 

🇦🇺

J. Duckworth

 

.

 

21

A. Davidovich Fokina

 

🇦🇷

T. Tirante

 

.

 

.

 

🇷🇺

13

K. Khachanov

 

🇦🇷

M. Trungelliti

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

🇨🇿

T. Macháč

 

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

.

 

Tell us what you noticed on the first day…

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Sports Business, Culture, Tennis, Women’s Tennis

2026 The Athletic Media Company

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: Sports.yahoo.com