The French Open
Roland Garros 2026 Women’s Day 6
Iga Swiatek put concepts gleaned from her 2026 training block at Rafael Nadal’s academy to good use on Friday with a 6-4, 6-4 win into the French Open fourth round.
The four-time champion at Roland Garros beat Polish compatriot Magda Linette to advance to the second week of the Grand Slam she has dominated in recent years, winning three of the last five editions and four of the past seven,
The former world No. 1 now ranked third owns 10 of her 25 career titles on clay,
She spent 87 minutes in dispatching her countrywoman, who fired 26 unforced errors in the third-round meeting.
Swiatek spent some spring days at the Nadal facility on his home island of Mallorca and said she picked up some valuable tips.
She seemed most thrilled that the 14-time French Open champion looked in on a training session.
“It was an amazing experience, I’m happy Rafa was able to come to some of my practices.
“That gave me a lot of motivation to work even harder.”
Swiatek beat Linette for the second time in three meetings. sending over a service winner on first match point.
“I needed to be patient, it is easy to make a wrong decision. I wanted to play solid and I did a good job,” the winner said.
Swiatek said she was pleased with her serving – five of seven break points won.
Elina Svitolina, seeded seventh and four times a quarter-finalist, took a step ahead through a 6-2, 6-3 thrashing of German Tamara Korpatash.
Teenaged eighth seed Mirra Andreeva booked the tournament second week for a third consecutive year, holding off Maris Bouzkova 6-4, 6-4.
The 2024 semi-finalist ran her record in the series with the Czech to a perfect 5-0, advancing with an overhead winner on match point.
The 19-year-old Andreeva hammered 30 winners in victory to reach the last 16 on another day of hot, sunny conditions, which she says helps her game.
“When it’s hot and sunny, I have more advantage,” she said. “The ball bounces much better and I can give good shape to my shots.
“It just suits me more to play at this (midday) time than later in the day.”
The winner said that despite her record over Bouzkova, the match was not easy.
“Every time we play, it’s a battle. She’s an amazing competitor.
“She fights for every ball, I have to work all the points to win them.
“I’m happy I was able to close it out even missing some shots. I played aggressive throughout the whole match,” added the South of France-based player coached by former Wimbledon winner Conchina Martinez.
Marta Kostyuk, one of four Ukrainian women bidding for the second week of the major, booked a fourth round spot five years after her last appearance at that level.
The WTA No. 16 with clay titles this spring in Madrid and Rouen dispatched Swiss Viktorija Golubic 6-4, 6-3.
She stands a perfect 15-0 this season on clay as she continues the longest winning streak of her career.
“I started really well, and then I was rushing a bit,’ Kostyuk said. It was a tricky match – very humid today.
“Everyone is feeling worse and worse with every day with this heat. I’m excited that it’s not going to be like this on Sunday anymore (cool change arriving).
“I had enough patience today to close this match in two sets, and yeah, just still be aggressive.”
Kostyuk added that she ignores her current win streak going into her fourth-rounder against clay powerhouse Swiatek.
“I don’t think about it, I just play match by match. It’s a Grand Slam. It’s
a different tournament.
“I’m happy with the streak, of course, but I don’t think about it that much.”
Sorana Cirstea may start to re-think her upcoming retirement from tennis after crushing Argentine Solana Sierra 6-0, 6-0 in just 57 minutes.
At age 36, the Romanian becomes the second oldest woman to win 6-0, 6-0 at a Slam after Victoria Azarenka, who did the same here in 2025.
Swiss Jil Teichmann advanced past 2023 runner-up and tournament 10th seed Karen Muchova 6-1, 7-5.
“I’m very happy, not only with today’s win, just how the whole week is going so far. It’s been very emotional. I have enjoyed a lot, especially playing on Lenglen with my little fan club.”
The No. 170 took a break from tennis last autumn after several seasons of back injury pain and came back to the Tour only last month, reaching the Rabat semis.
.Teichmann fought back from 5-1 down in the second set to reach the second week in a major for the second time after Roland Garros four years ago.
She earned her first win over a top 20 opponent in more than three years.
“I’ve been doing that since I’m 14 nonstop. I was very, very lucky with my body. It’s a very positive thing so I could be playing the whole time.
“But things happen on court, off court. Changes with quite a lot of
my team, as well as in my personal life things happened At some point things get too much.
“:I decided last September to take a little break, even though I was, top 100. I just needed to start again from the base.
“It’s basically what I did since January. I’m working very hard with my team. Started from zero, took my time building up.”