
Swiatek wants equal treatment for women as French Open schedule remains in focus
PARIS, May 30 (Reuters) - Amid criticism of the French Open's scheduling decisions, Iga Swiatek pointed to the Mexican waves rippling around Court Suzanne Lenglen during her compelling match against Jaqueline Cristian as evidence of women's tennis's entertainment value.
The claycourt major features only one match daily during the primetime evening session that begins after 8.15 p.m. local time (1815 GMT), but has so far not featured a women's match in that slot in the opening six days of action.
The last time a women's singles match was played under the lights of Court Philippe Chatrier was the fourth-round meeting between Aryna Sabalenka and Sloane Stephens on June 4, 2023.
Defending women's champion Swiatek, who overcame Cristian of Romania 6-2 7-5, said she usually adjusts to the schedule she is given but added that it should be "equal".
"Women's matches can be entertainment the same way (as men's matches). As you could see today on my match, they (fans) were doing the Mexican waves and everything. So people like it," Swiatek told reporters.
"We can put on a nice show. That's why I think it should be equal. That's it."
Women's governing body the WTA told Reuters via email it encourages all combined tournaments to provide a balanced match schedule that showcases the best of both women's and men's tennis in premium scheduling slots.
Three-times Grand Slam runner-up Ons Jabeur reignited a debate that has raged since night sessions were introduced at Roland Garros four years ago, saying this week that women's matches were being sidelined.
The Tunisian added in a post on X on Friday that "honouring one side of the sport shouldn't mean ignoring the other".
Night sessions are exclusively broadcast by Amazon's Prime service in France.
French Open tournament director Amelie Mauresmo said that women's matches, played over a maximum of three sets as opposed to the five on the men's side, could finish "really fast" and having an extra match in that slot was unfeasible.
"If we have two matches in the night session it doesn't work in terms of how late players are going to finish," said Mauresmo in a press conference on Friday, explaining that earlier starts would not work as well.
"The stands are going to be empty in most of the first match. That's what we think. So we keep this one match in the evening. It's not ideal.
"We cannot check every box because we have many things to think when we're making these choices."
Mauresmo, who won two Grand Slam singles titles, said that the French Open scheduling was not a reflection of its attitude towards women's players.
"For me, the message is not changing, and it has never been that the girls are not worthy to play at night," she said.
"It's never been this. I'll not accept that you carry this message. That's clear to me."
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Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Aryna Sabalenka dethrones French Open queen Iga Swiatek in thrilling semi-final - as world No1 eyes fourth Grand Slam title
The queen of Paris is dethroned, guillotined by the Tiger from the East. Iga Swiatek had won three straight French Open titles and four overall - but never before had she faced Aryna Sabalenka. The Belarusian hammered home her status as world No1, winning a pulsating semi-final 7-6, 4-6, 6-0. The two finest players of the decade had not met at a Grand Slam since the 2022 US Open, and after three years of cold warfare, of straining at the leash, they flew at each other with tooth and claw. When the dust settled, Sabalenka, 27, moved into her first Roland Garros final. Whichever of Coco Gauff and French wildcard Lois Boisson wins the other semi-final, Sabalenka will be favourite to complete the third leg of a career Grand Slam, after her US Open title and two in Australia. The context to this match was Swiatek's terrible form coming in. The 24-year-old had not won a single title since her fourth here last year, and had suffered a succession of shocking defeats - mostly to the kind of power baseliners of which Sabalenka is the gold standard. It has been akin to when a Test cricket batsman is 'worked out' by the bowling fraternity. Not everyone can execute it - still very few in fact - but it is now clear how you beat Swiatek: you rush her, especially on the forehand win where she takes such a big backswing; you play relentlessly flat and hard, attack her first and second serves, especially by drilling the ball straight at her on the forehand side. Sabalenka did exactly that, steaming into a double-break 4-1 lead. Everything about Swiatek's game was frenetic, rushed. She was not giving the match, or herself, any time to breath and settle. In a comparison of these two players' strengths, the greatest advantage to Swiatek would lie in her movement. Sabalenka moves well enough but she is more of a wham bam woman; Swiatek's footwork is freakishly fast; she seems to take twice the number of steps of anyone else. Sabalenka is a tiger, as the tattoo on her left forearm denotes; Swiatek is more of a gazelle, whose traditional approach when facing a big cat is to run rings round it, not trot up and say, Fancy a scrap? In the final analysis, of rallies between one and four shots, Sabalenka won 34 more than her opponent; in rallies of five or more strokes, Swiatek was +10 - but she did not do enough to elongate the rallies. Still, at 4-1, with a double break, some tension seemed to creep into the Sabalenka game. Leading 40-30, she hit an ace that would have made it 5-1, but the umpire called back the play for a net cord, leaving Sabalenka bemused. Whether that affected her concentration or not, it was a different match thereafter. Switek was starting to pick the Sabalenka serve better and adjust to the pace of her shots. Her first hold of the match brought her back to 3-4, then Sabalenka played a shocker of a service game, including two double faults, to level the scores. At 5-5, having been a net-cord from 5-1, the Sabalenka of a few years ago would have crumbled emotionally; the imperious new version played a brilliant return game, including her best shot of the match, a curling forehand pass on the run. Swiatek responded with a break of her own but Sabalenka snatched the tiebreak 7-1. The standard of returning had been breathtaking. A recent innovation in tennis has been data company Infosys and their shot-quality metrics. The gist is every shot is scored out of 10; at the end of the first set, Sabalenka and Swiatek's return quality was measured at 9.8 and 9.4 respectively, compared to the field's average of 6.5. The return quality dipped in the second set - how could it not? - and holds became more easy to come by. Swiatek played with more poise, too, mixing up her game far better, getting her opponent on the run. Her first serve percentage almost jumped from 54 to 76; Sabalenka's dropping from 55 to 48. After two hours of brutal brilliance, we looked set for an epic deciding set. Instead it was a rout, as Sabalenka sorted out her first serve percentage and landed massive forehands time and again. She ended, appropriately, with two clean return winners.
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The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Lois Boisson v Coco Gauff live: Scores and updates from French Open semi-final as Aryna Sabalenka awaits
French wildcard Lois Boisson looks to continue her incredible breakthrough run when she faces second seed Coco Gauff for a place in the French Open final against World No 1 Aryna Sabalenka. Boisson, the World No 361, has beaten back-to-back top-10 opponents to reach the semi-finals on her grand slam debut and Gauff will have to face the home crowd who will be desperate for Boisson to make the final. The 22-year-old Boisson suffered an ACL injury the week before the French Open last year but has returned from a lengthy recovery to become the first wildcard to reach the Roland Garros semi-finals in the Open era. In the first semi-final, Sabalenka ended Iga Swiatek 's French Open reign as the World No 1 progressed to her first Roland Garros final with a 7-6 (7-1) 4-6 6-0 victory over the defending champion. Swiatek was aiming to become the first player in the Open era to win four French Open women's singles titles in a row but suffered her first defeat at the tournament in four years, having faced a barrage of aggressive returns from the World No 1. Lois Boisson vs Coco Gauff No rest for the wicked out on Philippe-Chatrier, as we're going straight into the second semi-final. World No. 361 and wildcard Lois Boisson is up against world No. 2 and second seed Coco Gauff, a US Open champion and former finalist here. Boisson has had a fairytale run at her home slam, a year on from an ACL injury which wrecked her chances of competing as a wildcard here. But she's up against a tough and experienced competitor here - although having beaten two top-10 opponents in a row, the home crowd will be backing her to cause another upset. Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:52 Lois Boisson: Winning the French Open a 'dream' Lois Boisson says she is dreaming of winning the French Open title and is not satisfied with reaching the semi-finals after the wildcard continued her breakthrough Roland Garros run. The 22-year-old, who is making her grand slam debut a year on from rupturing her ACL, stunned sixth seed Mirra Andreeva 7-6 (8-6) 6-3 to set up a semi-final clash with Coco Gauff in Paris. Boisson came into the tournament ranked 361st in the world but is now the first player to reach the semi-finals at Roland Garros as a wildcard in the Open era. 'I think every kid who plays tennis has the dream to win a grand slam,' Boisson said. 'More for French players to win Roland Garros, for sure. It's a dream. For sure I will go for the dream, because my dream is to win it, not to be in the semi-final. So I will try to do my best.' Jamie Braidwood5 June 2025 16:51 Coco Gauff prepared be French Open villain against Lois Boisson Coco Gauff is prepared to face the hostile French Open fans as she takes on wildcard Lois Boisson in the semi-finals and says she has overcome difficult crowds in the past. 'I think there are two ways I have done it,' the 21-year-old said. 'Either, A, just pretend they're cheering for you, and B, just using it and not letting that get to you. I have been in crowds where they are 99% for me, so I don't have an issue with it. 'I hope everyone will be respectful and things. If not, it's cool. I think, you know, it makes sports exciting, and I can't get irritated at the fact that someone is rooting for their hometown hero, because I would do the same. 'I think it's just something that I will mentally prepare for if it were to happen and expect and be ready for.' Jamie Braidwood5 June 2025 16:51 Aryna Sabalenka beats Iga Swiatek 7-6(1), 4-6, 6-0 Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:50 Aryna Sabalenka beats Iga Swiatek 7-6(1), 4-6, 6-0 A bit more from a very smiley Sabalenka. Asked about her phenomenal 20-minute final set, she says, 'I'm glad that I found my serve and it was a bit easier with the serve. 6-0, what can I say, it couldn't be more perfect than that.' Mats Wilander asks if she'll be watching tonight's second semi-final, between Coco Gauff and French wildcard Lois Boisson. Sabalenka says her team will watch tonight and they'll analyse it together tomorrow. 'It's another great semi-final, enjoy guys! I'm pretty sure you guys are going to be cheering for one person like crazy, I'm not sure I really want her to win!' she jokes. With a final 'merci beaucoup,' she heads off to take selfies with fans before taking her leave. A brilliant performance from her, particularly in that stunning final set, but she had a big helping hand from Swiatek's total collapse. Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:45 Aryna Sabalenka beats Iga Swiatek 7-6(1), 4-6, 6-0 Let's hear from the winner, three-time major champion and first-time French Open finalist Aryna Sabalenka. 'Honestly it feels incredible but also I understand the job is not done yet,' she tells Mats Wilander on court. 'I'm just thrilled with the performance today, with the atmosphere in the stadium, you guys are - I don't know, just thank you so much for the atmopshere you bring, because it makes us feel amazing. 'She's the toughest opponent, especially on the clay, especially at Roland-Garros. I'm proud I was able to get this win. It was a tricky match but I managed it somehow.' Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:40 Aryna Sabalenka wins 7-6(1), 4-6, 6-0 Sabalenka has let out plenty of emotion in this match but simply grins in delight as she books her spot in the final. The pair exchange a hug at the net and a chastened-looking Swiatek waves to the crowd before swiftly walking off court. Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:35 GAME, SET AND MATCH! *Iga Swiatek 6-7, 6-4 0-6 Aryna Sabalenka And another brilliant cross-court forehand seals it! Swiatek's 26-match winning streak at the French Open comes to an end, and Sabalenka is into her first ever Roland-Garros final! We are guaranteed a first-time champion at the weekend. Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:31 *Iga Swiatek 6-7, 6-4 0-5 Aryna Sabalenka Shouts of 'Come on Iga!' ring out as Swiatek steps up to avoid being on the receiving end of a bagel. She gets a point on the board, ending Sabalenka's streak of nine in a row, but her serve is collapsing and she double faults for 15-15. The rallies are down to two shots at this point, serving Sabalenka perfectly. A glorious return walloped into the open court brings up two match points. Flo Clifford5 June 2025 16:30 Iga Swiatek 6-7, 6-4 0-5 Aryna Sabalenka* Swiatek is racking up the unforced errors, producing yet more as Sabalenka's serve continues to obliterate the Pole's defences. Swiatek simply cannot get the ball back into play and with four great serves, Sabalenka races to a love hold and is just one game from a maiden Roland-Garros final. Flo Clifford


The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Aryna Sabalenka ends Iga Swiatek's French Open reign in semi-final rollercoaster
Iga Swiatek's reign as the queen of clay was ended by Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals of the French Open. The irresistible force beat the immovable object as runaway world number one Sabalenka inflicted the four-time champion's first defeat at the tournament in four years. In the first meeting between the WTA's two most dominant players at a grand slam since the 2022 US Open, Swiatek's run of 26 consecutive victories at the Paris grand slam was halted in a 7-6 (1) 4-6 6-0 defeat. A three-time grand slam champion on hard courts, Sabalenka finally made her first final on the red dirt of Roland Garros. After a match which would have graced the final – and it probably would have been had Swiatek's ranking not slipped to five – Sabalenka said: 'Honestly it feels incredible. 'I understand the job is not done yet but I'm thrilled with the performance and this win.' Sabalenka's powerful, deep returns unsettled 24-year-old Swiatek at the start as she raced into a 3-0 lead with two breaks. The Belarusian thought she had served an ace for a 5-1 lead, only for a let call from umpire Kader Nouni, who felt it had flicked the net cord. The momentum suddenly shifted with Swiatek winning four successive games, before Sabalenka held and then produced a stunning forehand winner on the run to break for 6-5. She could not hold, though, with Swiatek's returns now doing considerable damage, but Sabalenka regrouped impressively to take the tie-break for the concession of just one point. The quality increased in the second set, so much so that any slight mistake from one player was brutally punished by the other. Polish star Swiatek was making far more forays to the net than usual, and it paid off when a perfect cushioned volley into the corner levelled the match. Sabalenka's levels – including her noise levels – moved up a notch again in the decider and the 27-year-old drew first blood with a break for 2-0. A second break knocked the stuffing out of the defending champion, who looked resigned to her fate long before Sabalenka's final backhand winner flew past her.