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French Open order of play and Roland Garros schedule including Novak Djokovic

French Open order of play and Roland Garros schedule including Novak Djokovic

Yahoo4 days ago

The second round of the French Open continues at Roland Garros on a big day for home players in Paris.
World No 1 Jannik Sinner will be facing the retiring Richard Gasquet, Britain's Jack Draper takes on the popular veteran Gael Monfils in the night session, and three-time French Open champion Novak Djokovic meets another home favourite in Corentin Moutet.
Follow LIVE: French Open scores, results and updates
British No 1 Katie Boulter faces Australian Open champion Madison Keys, while Jacob Fearnley looks to back up his opening win over Stanislas Wawrinka against another Frenchman in Ugo Humbert.
Coco Gauff, Alexander Zverev and Mirra Andreeva are also in action on day five.
Today's order of play is below.
all times BST
Court Philippe-Chatrier (start 11:00)
Ann Li (USA) vs. Jessica Pegula (USA) [3]
Jannik Sinner (ITA) [1] vs. Richard Gasquet (FRA)
Madison Keys (USA) [7] vs. Katie Boulter (GBR)
Night session, not before 19:15
Gaël Monfils (FRA) vs. Jack Draper (GBR) [5]
Court Suzanne-Lenglen (start 10:00)
Jaume Munar (ESP) vs. Arthur Fils (FRA) [14]
Tereza Valentova (CZE) vs. Coco Gauff (USA) [2]
Corentin Moutet (FRA) vs. Novak Djokovic (SRB) [6]
Daria Kasatkina (AUS) [17] vs. Leolia Jeanjean (FRA)
Court Simonne-Mathieu (start 10:00)
Mirra Andreeva [6] vs. Ashlyn Krueger (USA)
Alexander Zverev (GER) [3] vs. Jesper de Jong (NED)
Elena-Gabriela Ruse (ROU) vs. Paula Badosa (ESP) [10]
Jacob Fearnley (GBR) vs. Ugo Humbert (FRA) [22]
Court 14 (start 10:00)
Alex de Minaur (AUS) [9] vs. Alexander Bublik (KAZ)
Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) [15] vs. Veronika Kudermetova
João Fonseca (BRA) vs. Pierre-Hugues Herbert (FRA)
Victoria Azarenka vs. Sofia Kenin (USA) [31]
Court 7 (start 10:00)
Henrique Rocha (POR) vs. Jakub Mensik (CZE) [19]
Andrey Rublev [17] vs. Adam Walton (AUS)
Anhelina Kalinina (UKR) vs. Lois Boisson (FRA)
Alycia Parks (USA) vs. Elsa Jacquemot (FRA)
Court 6 (start 10:00)
Magdalena Frech (POL) [25] vs. Marketa Vondrousova (CZE)
Elisabetta Cocciaretto (ITA) vs. Ekaterina Alexandrova [20]
Flavio Cobolli (ITA) vs. Matteo Arnaldi (ITA)
Denis Shapovalov (CAN) [27] vs. Filip Misolic (AUT)

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Kasatkina facing point of no return
Kasatkina facing point of no return

New York Times

time20 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Kasatkina facing point of no return

Follow live coverage from Roland Garros as Coco Gauff and Alexander Zverev make the quarters, with top seed Jannik Sinner also playing in Paris today Getty Images Novak Djokovic is on court bidding to reach the French Open quarters at Roland Garros today, with Jannik Sinner contesting the night session. Coco Gauff (2), Mirra Andreeva (6), and Alexander Zverev (3) are already in the last eight after wins today — but American Jessica Pegula (3) was shocked by French wild card Lois Boisson (3-6, 6-4, 6-4). Madison Keys (7) is also eyeing a last-eight berth as she faces Hailey Baptiste. Follow below with expert analysis from our reporters in Paris. Watch: TNT, truTV, Tennis Channel, Max (U.S.); TNT, Discovery+ (UK) TNT, truTV, Tennis Channel, Max (U.S.); TNT, Discovery+ (UK) Join the discussion: live@ GO FURTHER Coco Gauff eases into French Open quarterfinals, forgetting rackets her only concern Connections: Sports Edition Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Andreeva 6-3, 5-5* Kasatkina This set has been a lot of fun from Daria Kasatkina, and a flying forehand down the line finally gives her a set point on Mirra Andreeva's serve. That was a good recovery in itself, after Kasatkina went long on an open court at 0-15. But again, Andreeva keeps finding a way of chipping away at Kasatkina's movement and forcing an extra shot. The roar she lets out at holding serve was guttural, and said it all about what she is feeling — as well as how important these moments are in this match. Kasatkina has to hold here, and at 0-15 she's just smashed into the net. That's 0-30 and Andreeva is two points away from a crucial break… Getty Images Coco Gauff chatted courtside after making the last eight, where she will face the winner of the match between compatriots Madison Keys (7) and Hailey Baptiste later. She said: 'Yeah it was tough, obviously. Overall I thought I played great. 'Definitely I think I move well on clay, I'm really comfortably sliding. 'The physicality — this is the most physical surface for sure, and I do well on that.' FINAL: Gauff 6-0, 7-5 That's the match! Coco Gauff (2) takes her second match point. Though the second set was 53 minutes to the first set's 29, that test of her abilities will prove useful deeper in the tournament. 20th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova's tournament ends. Getty Images Gauff 6-0 *6-5 Alexandrova Gauff three points away from the quarterfinals at 15-0, but Alexandrova throws her heart and soul and more into a Hail Mary forehand down the line. And makes it! But then nets disappointingly. 17 unforced errors on the backhand, to Gauff's five. Massive serve from Gauff and she has two match points. Andreeva 6-3, *4-5 Kasatkina Wow. Just like that, Mirra Andreeva gets to 15-40 and takes the break back. That is exactly why this Russian teenager is such a promising talent. Set saved and back on serve… Getty Images Andreeva 6-3, 3-5* Kasatkina It's been a genuine slip in levels from Mirra Andreeva, who slips to 0-30 against an opponent who is retaining her aggression but now doing so without the errors. Andreeva gets back to 30-30 but Daria Kasatkina soon has a second break point of this set, and makes it two from two. I'm still seeing enough from what Andreeva is trying to do that it wouldn't take much for her to restore her advantage — but right now, it's the Australian enjoying herself and feeling energised. And now serving for the second set. Gauff 6-0 *6-5 Alexandrova Alexandrova is thrown off. 0-15, mishit from Gauff and Alexandrova looks like she will put it away easily, but she runs all around it, wide on the left, and pushes it too far right. 0-40, three break points, and this game has got away from the 20th seed. A break to love. Gauff will serve for the match. Getty Images Gauff 6-0 5-5* Alexandrova Gauff serving to make it 5-5 in this second set. Double fault makes it 30-15, a fortunate net cord sits up for her and she finds a winner, Alexandrova understandably frustrated. Another poor double fault, 40-30... but Alexandrova lets her off the hook. Big game coming up! Getty Images Andreeva 6-3, *3-4 Kasatkina It really was better from Daria Kasatkina. She builds on that encouraging game with a hold to love — and then some genuine forcefulness on Mirra Andreeva's serve. From 40-15, the Russian is pinned back to deuce before Kasatkina takes her first break point in the game to get back on terms in the second set. The Australian has the ability to burst into life and into contention at any point in any match. She's just threatening to reach that point now. Kasatkina makes it three games in a row by holding her next service game. Getty Images Alexandrova has found the footing. She's hitting deep and hard and flat, which is what has given Gauff difficulty in the past. Credit to her for putting a bagel set behind her and resetting herself and forcing Gauff to fight for the second set. She's a game away form sending it to a third. Gauff 6-0 *4-5 Alexandrova Ekaterina Alexandrova, we see you. The 20th seed was steamrollered in the first set by second seed Coco Gauff but has upped her game and is really giving the American some problems now. One particularly fine strike down the line kisses the chalk and takes her to 40-15. 40-30 but still game point, and she converts. Gauff must hold to stay in the second set! Gauff 6-0 4-4* Alexandrova Gauff, serving to make it 5-3, is at 15-40 down. Two break back points for Alexandrova, who seems to find her best level only when she's in serious jeopardy. She loses one as she nets after a treacherously spinning backhand. But not the other! Some booming striking. One big shot pushes Coco left, then she smacks a forehand onto the line on the other side. Perfect. And a break. Getty Images Gauff 6-0 *4-3 Alexandrova Danger! 0-15, and Alexandrova errs, ending an 18-shot rally with a mistake. 0-40 down and three break points. This could be the start of the endgame. Alexandrova has to hold, really, if she wants to stay in the tournament. One saved. A second saved at the net. What a point from Alexandrova! She saves a third with the highest-quality rally of the match. Great defence and attack from both. Deuce, but Gauff powers a backhand down the line and shouts 'Come on!'. A fourth break point of the game. Oh, that's unlucky. Alexandrova's shot clips the net and slows up fortuitously for Gauff, who has all the time in the world to whack away a backhand winner. Alexandrova is walking off court before the ball even lands. A break. And probably the match then and there. Andreeva 6-3, 3-1* Kasatkina Better here from Daira Kasatkina, who comes out on top of a 26-shot rally at 15-0 and gets a look at 15-30 on Mirra Andreeva's serve with a glorious backhand winner that has both power and control. But there could be something a little deflating from how well Andreeva deals with the situation and flips the Australian in a couple of short points. Andreeva holds with minimal fuss thereafter. Getty Images Gauff 6-0 3-3* Alexandrova Gauff isn't playing at her top level, as she was in the first set, but it's still enough to see her ticking along with holds. Wonderful semi-off-balance forehand spins high and wide, forcing Alexandrova to net. At 30-30, the game is alive, but the Russian nets and groans audibly in frustration. Andreeva 6-3, *2-1 Kasatkina A lovely, comfortable hold for Mirra Andreeva to consolidate her break — and you can sense that is putting the pressure on Daria Kasatkina. She's yet to really make the attacks stick on her opponent, and with that knowledge she is trying to force the issue more. But that is accelerating Kasatkina losing ground on the No. 6 seed. She is battling, for sure. And even has to save a break point that is the result of her own double fault. Kasatkina holds in the end, to avoid going down a double break. Looking back at the best moments from Sunday at Roland Garros. Enjoy. Getty Images Gauff 6-0 *2-3 Alexandrova What a shot from Alexandrova, maybe her best shot of the match. She runs Gauff from side to side, moving her around Chatrier, and sends a booming backhand cross-court and sailing away for a winner. Gauff marginally out and that's a hold. Getty Images Andreeva 6-3, *1-0 Kasatkina Alarm bells ringing loudly now for Daria Kasatkina. Again she's wild from deep with a crosscourt backhand, which offers up a second break point of this opening game in the second set. Even better is how Mirra Andreeva then covers the ground and deals with the Australian coming to the net, by lifting a lob over her head and just inside the baseline. The sixth seed now leads by a set and a break.

Is ‘MobLand' returning for season 2? Everything we know so far
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Is ‘MobLand' returning for season 2? Everything we know so far

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Lois Boisson reaches French Open quarterfinals, stunning American No. 2 Jessica Pegula
Lois Boisson reaches French Open quarterfinals, stunning American No. 2 Jessica Pegula

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lois Boisson reaches French Open quarterfinals, stunning American No. 2 Jessica Pegula

ROLAND GARROS, PARIS — One year ago, Loïs Boisson had her tennis dream dashed. After tearing through the third rung of professional women's tennis, the French Tennis Federation (FFT) awarded Boisson a wild card for the French Open. A week before, at a minor tournament in Paris, Boisson tore her anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee and missed nine months of tennis. She didn't even watch the tournament on television. Advertisement Twelve months after the pain, Boisson was on Court Philippe-Chatrier, soaking in the adoration of a French crowd. She upset Jessica Pegula, the world No. 3, to reach the French Open quarterfinals. She is the first French woman to reach the last eight at Roland Garros since Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic in 2017, after beating Pegula 3-6, 6-4, 6-4. 'I don't know what to say,' Boisson told the crowd in French on court. 'I knew before the match that there was a possibility, but I knew that she was very tough … I gave my all and in the end I won.' Boisson looked a little overawed by the occasion in the first set, as Pegula's relentless accuracy and consistency from the baseline ground her down and drew her into mistakes. Boisson couldn't read the American's drop shots and was often scrambling to no avail after being pushed further and further to the back of the court. Boisson is the world No. 361 as she makes her return from injury, and the 358 places were showing. But Boisson did not wilt, and the slow filling-up of the lower bowl of Chatrier was a barometer for how she worked her way into the match. Boisson figured out that she could make Pegula hesitate in coming to the net, with a combination of drop shots and lobs that left the American in two minds. Advertisement At 4-4 in the second set, the pressure started to tell. Pegula missed two groundstrokes she will likely never miss at a major again, before Boisson cracked a backhand crosscourt to take the set. Riding a wave of tricolores and chants of 'Loïs,' Boisson broke Pegula in the first game of the third set, but the American came back to reel off three games as Boisson went from sparkling to flat — and the crowd did too. But at 4-4, just as in the second set, her combination of high, heavy spin and elite redirection on her forehand — dragging Pegula this way and that — put more doubts in the American's mind. She missed a backhand from the middle of the court at deuce, and a point later, Boisson was serving for the match. With Boisson down 30-40, both players tightened. Pegula waifed a backhand over the net and then hit a clever short, angled forehand, but Boisson eked it over and the ball died at Pegula's feet. The American earned a second break point, but the crowd rose to Boisson again. A drop-shot-lob combination spinning over Pegula's head — the play that had given her a foothold in the match in the first place — brought the crowd to its feet and saw Boisson raise her arms for noise for the first time. Advertisement By the final game, Court Philippe-Chatrier was almost full. Word moved around the ticket-holders, likely waiting for Novak Djokovic's match to follow this one, that one of their own was doing something special. Another break point. Another drop shot. A flick from Pegula that dropped wide, the American leaning on the net in disbelief. A net cord off a Pegula return sent Boisson scrambling forward to a ball she somehow dug out. She played the next shot, a volley off a weak lob, like she wanted it to land on a pillow, not some clay. Pegula got to it but could only net. On her first match point, Boisson sent a forehand inside-in and raised her arms to a roar that shook Chatrier. It was Boisson's roar after the handshake, arms out and screaming into the sky, that made the past 12 months melt into air. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company

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