The 2025 French Open, the 12 months’s second main, kicks off on Sunday. The reigning champions, Carlos Alcaraz and Iga Swiatek, are favored to repeat, however not by an amazing margin.
Listed below are the highest 5 storylines to observe at Roland-Garros.
The post-Rafa period is formally right here
Rafael Nadal retired from tennis finally 12 months’s Davis Cup, however his retirement is not going to really feel official till the organizers of the French Open honor him during Sunday’s opening ceremony. It will be attention-grabbing to see who takes the throne from the 14-time winner, who made Roland-Garros his playground for practically twenty years. Alcaraz is the apparent candidate to succeed Nadal, however keep watch over blossoming World No. 8 Lorenzo Musetti, who thrives on clay.
Can Coco Gauff trip her momentum?
The 21-year-old has been taking part in her greatest tennis in a 12 months, reaching consecutive clay-court WTA 1000 finals in Rome and Madrid (the youngest participant to take action). Whereas she misplaced to Jasmine Paolini and Aryna Sabalenka, she confirmed super progress in her clay-court sport after an underwhelming clay-court swing in 2024 that noticed her falter on the Paris Olympics and Roland-Garros. Beforehand a runner-up on the French Open in 2022, Gauff is a much-improved participant. The 2023 U.S. Open winner is primed to win her second main.
Will the teenagers play spoiler once more?
On the Australian Open, three teenagers upset top-10-ranked players, a exceptional flip of occasions that hadn’t occurred at a major in nearly 20 years. The trio, Jakub Mensik, Learner Tien and Joao Fonseca, has continued to take strides, with Mensik stunning Novak Djokovic to seize his first ATP1000 title in Miami. The rise of the teenagers extends to the ladies, with 18-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva winning back-to-back WTA1000 titles in Dubai and Indian Wells. No one needs to be shocked if Mensik or Andreeva go the gap, very like when a 19-year-old Nadal received his first French Open title in 2005.
Absolutely, the Queen of Clay will not four-peat?
Swiatek is eying her fifth French Open title, and fourth in a row, however she arrives in Paris low on confidence after a collection of underwhelming performances in 2025. Her third-round exit at Rome meant she dropped to World No. 5 (lowest since 2022), making her path to a fifth title brutal, to place it mildly. The Pole might run into Emma Raducanu within the second spherical, No. 26 Marta Kostyuk within the third and No. 12 Elena Rybakina or No. 21 Jelena Ostapenko within the fourth. She is infamously 0-2 towards Rybakina on clay, and 0-6 general to Ostapenko, together with two losses this 12 months. Even when she will escape the brutal draw, she’d must take care of the red-hot Paolini or Sabalenka within the latter phases.
Will Alcaraz proceed to have Sinner’s quantity?
Since Sept. 27, 2023, World No. 1 Jannik Sinner is 1-4 towards Alcaraz and 104-5 against the rest of the pack. Much more stunningly, his solely two losses on the Tour since August (41-2) have come towards the Spaniard. On the latest Rome ultimate, Alcaraz ended Sinner’s 26-match winning streak, enhancing his head-to-head report towards the Italian to 7-4. The loss additionally marked Sinner’s first straight-sets loss since 2023, a testomony to his dominance of each participant not named Alcaraz. It is clear that Alcaraz has Sinner’s quantity and needs to be favored to win in the event that they collide within the ultimate of the French Open.
Honorable point out: Novak Djokovic returns to Paris
Final August, the Serb captured his first Olympic gold medal on the 2024 Paris Olympics to finish the profession ‘Golden Slam.’ Djokovic referred to the win as his “biggest sporting success,” which shocked many, contemplating his report 24 majors and different achievements. May the completely satisfied recollections of Paris propel Djokovic to his twenty fifth main title? Current kind isn’t in his favor. The 38-year-old suffered back-to-back early losses in Monte Carlo and Madrid, and received simply the solitary title in 2024 (his worst year as a pro since 2005). Nonetheless, counting out the three-time Roland-Garros champion could be silly.