THE FRENCH OPEN
French Open 2025 Women’s Day 9
Jessica Pegula suffered a French Open ambush on Monday as the American third seed lost 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 to French wild card Lois Boisson to exit the fourth round.
Pegula went down to the WTA No. 361 who had recent knee problems and missed 10 months of early-career play due to right shoulder surgery.
The local outsider was making her Grand Slam main draw debut and playing for the first time on the Chatrier showcourt. She also clocked her first victory over a top 20 opponent as she stunned No. 3 Pegula.
The upset featured nine deuces over the final two games.
Boisson completed her upset in a shade under two and three-quarter hours, keeping Pegula and on the run in the tight final set.
The French player lost an early third-set break and saved four break points in the final game before sending Pegula fruitlessly chasing a forehand winner to the corner on first match point.
Boisson, 22, had failed to qualify here in 2021, 2022 and 2023.
The Frenchwoman last made the headlines in “Deodorant Gate” at the Rouen event last month when she beat Harriet Dart who complained to the umpire that she needed to use deodorant.
The last French wildcard to reach the Roland Garros last eight was Mary Pierce in 2002. She becomes the lowest ranked player to reach s Grand Slam quarter-final since Kaia Kanepi at the US Open eight years ago.
US compatriot Coco Gauff was not lacking in confidence after reaching the French Open quarter-finals for the fifth straight year, defeating Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-0, 7-5.
“Overall, I thought I played great,” the American said. “I move well on clay, I’m comfortable with the sliding.
“This is the most physical surface and I do great in that department.”
Gauff needed less than 30 minutes to sweep the opening set but met stiffened resistance in the second set before finally prevailing after another hour on court.
Roland Garros does appear to be the Floridian’s happy place as she won her 24th match here – the most of any tournament for her.
Teenaged sixth seed Mirra Andreeva matched her 2024 quarter-final with a 6-4, 7-5 defeat of Daria Kasatkina.
The pair are close but the 18-year-old Andreeva admits she gets nervous playing the Australian.
“I’m so, so happy I won, I just hate playing her, even practices are a torture for me,” she only half-joked.
“This was a hell of a match, I was able to stay calm in the second set. She raised and I had to fight to continue to play my game.
“I continued to believe in myself. I knew the match would be tough, so I’m glad to be back in the quarter-finals.”
She added: “I feel like she reads where I’m going to play. She knows when I’m
gonna hit a dropshot, which side. We had a lot of long points, and I felt like I was running from corner to corner a lot.”
Andreeva, a Paris semi-finalist a year ago, now stands 22-8 at the four majors; she is the youngest player to reach back-to-back quarters here since Swiss Martina Hingis (1997-1998).
She will bid for the semis against Boisson.
Kasatkina will leave Paris satisfied with her result after a tough run-up period and a jolting change of nationality to Australian.
“This week I felt back on track. All the four matches I played I felt as usual, normal.
“I was showing pretty good tennis. So, obviously it’s super positive sign, because when a person is struggling or having a little crisis, it’s tough to get out of it.”
Australian Open holder Madison Keys American compatriot Hailey Baptiste 6-3, 7-5 to complete the fourth round programme.
ATP
Tentative Tsitsipas slams former coach Goran
Fading former top 10 regular Stefanos Tsitsipas has lashed out at one-time coach Goran Ivanisevic, accusing the former Wimbledon winner of unfair criticism during their brief collaboration last season.
Greek Tsitsipas once stood among the big beasts of the ATP, achieving a top ranking of this in the world, with Grand Slam finals at Roland Garros and Melbourne.
But with his ranking now at 49th, the 27-year-old remains in a struggle with his game and blames most of his troubles on a lingering back injury.
Croat Ivanisevic, 54, had a brief spell with Tsitsipas last summer as the player attempted to break away from his longtime coach, his father Apostolos.
But family ties proved to be too strong, with Ivanisevic given the elbow after a Wimbledon first-round retirement.
Tsitsipas has complained of unfair criticism from his one-time mentor after Ivanisevic – who formerly coached Novak Djokovic – let loose on the player’s work ethic.
“He has to find a solution for his back issue. I was shocked. I’ve never seen such a poorly prepared player in my life,” Ivanisevic told Croat outlet SportKlub recalling the incident.
“Me, at my age and with this bad knee, I’m three times in better shape than him,” the former world No. 2 added. “In the end, I didn’t say anything bad. Everything I said was true and proved to be so.”
While Ivanisevic has moved on to work with French youngster Arthur Fils, Tsitsipas continues his comeback struggle.
“I didn’t see any point in it. If it was a way of him pushing me into working harder and getting my s*** together, it was definitely not the right tactic.
“I was really hurt,” he told London’s Times.
ATP
Sinner-Alcaraz to re-play Wimbledon final in Cincinnati
The top two in the world will clash on Monday for the Cincinnati Masters title as Jannik Sinner meets Carlos Alcaraz in their fourth final of the season.
Holder Sinner celebrated turning 24 with a 7-6 (4), 6-2 takedown of inspired qualifier Terence Atmane, with the Frenchman presenting his opponent with a Pokemon card from his Japanese collection before their semi-final.
Second seed Alcaraz, who lost the final here two years ago to Novak Djokovic, profitted as he prevailed over ailing Alexander Zverev, the 2021 winner here, who suffers from diabetes and was suffering in 32 Celsius heat.
While the German did finish the match after a medical time out, he lost the final 12 points of the match and could do little to stop a patchy Alcaraz, who struggled with four double-faults in a single second-set game.
Sinner and Alcaraz have played finals this season in Rome and Roland Garros – both won by the Spaniard – while Sinner triumphed last month at Wimbledon.
Sinner could become the first man since Roger Federer in 2014-2015 to win back-to-back titles in Cincinnati.
Alcaraz owns the ATP-best record of 53 match wins in 2025.
“It was a very, very tough challenge every time you play a new opponent,” Sinner said after beating the hard-hitting Atmane.
“In the later stages of the tournament,the pressure is on, they deserve to be there.”
Alcaraz said he will work to lift his level in time for the quirky Monday final.
“We started well with good rallies, a good level,” Alcaraz said of his semi-final. “All of a sudden he (Zverev) felt bad and I was thinking more about how he was feeling instead of playing good tennis.
“It was tough and I just wish him all the best.”
Cincinnati Masters
Gauff can’t waste Open energy on odd-format doubles
Coco Gauff admitted she just doesn’t have the mental and physical bandwidth to pay attention to the freakishly scheduled US Open mixed doubles event which is set to take place over two days even before the start of the major.
The second seed at the Cincinnati Masters who advanced to the third round on Sunday 6-3, 6-2 over Wang Xinyu explained her priorities.
The oddball experiment seeks to draw singles players into the mixed draw with a lure of a USD 1 million prize for the winning pair.
But the event will be staged during the days before the actual tournament – prime time for top players, who also have multiple sponsor PR duties to fulfill while preparing for the Grand Slam which starts on August 25.
“The free week is already packed for me for sponsor things. If I were to lose, I would not be happy.
“So I didn’t want to waste mental energy on that; I just knew it wasn’t going to work out for me with the scheduling-wise.”
The 2023 Open champion added: “I think it’s going to be an exciting two days. I’m not knocking it off for the future.
“But I like to plan my sponsor weeks like a year out, sometimes a
year and a half out.
“When this whole thing was coming up, I was already booked and busy.”
Main photo:- Coco Gauff won Roland Garros 2025 – by Roger Parker ISF Ltd
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