Saturday, June 6, 2026

Mirra Andreeva holds the Coupe Suzanne-Lenglen in Paris

For 19-year-old Mirra Andreeva, it wasn't a matter of "if," but--rather--a matter of "when," and "when" kept getting closer and closer. Today, in Paris, it turned into reality, as the young Russian star won the 2026 Roland-Garros title, defeating surprise finalist Maja Chwalinska 6-3, 6-2 in the final. She had some help--qualifier Chwalinska, playing her tenth match of the tournament, had visibly "run out of steam" as she set foot on Court Philippe Chatrier. It's also possible that the occasion finally got to her, though nerves, mental fatigue, and physical fatigue can form a patchwork that makes it hard to distinguish one from another.

But not to take anything away from Andreeva, who was careful to end many points before Chwalinska could work the drop-spin-lob magic that had gotten her to the final. The wind was blowing, and the roof was open, which made things more difficult for both players. Andreeva led 5-0 in the second set, but then Chwalinska held, and then broke Andreeva when she held for the match. It looked like the match might take an interesting turn, but Andreeva broke Chwalinska right back, and finished with a crosscourt backhand winner. 

This was Andreeva's 36th match win of the season, which puts her ahead (in that category) of everyone else on the tour. It was also her 22nd clay court match win, also a leading stat. 

In the past, Andreeva, who is--after all--a teenager, was prone to having emotionally explosive moments on the court. But, under the guidance of coach Conchita Martinez, she has learned to control those, and to put that energy into thinking and hitting the ball. 

As for Chwalinska, her story remains remarkable. She was number 114 in the world and had played very few WTA main draw matches when she entered the qualifying part of the tournament. She defeated three seeded players, the Olympic gold medal winner, the last Frenchwoman standing, and former top 10 player Maria Sakkari. It was a tough draw, yet she prevailed through nine matches. On Monday, Chwalinska will be number 21 in the world.

There was another big winner today: Diede De Groot, whose injury layoff robbed her of her long-held number 1 in the world standing, won the wheelchair singles title. De Groot last won it in 2024, before she had to take time off from the tour. She and partner Aniek Van Koot lost the doubles final, but winning another singles major has to feel especially good for De Groot, who has now won 24 of them.

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