Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka’s French Open final
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The WTA Rankings were updated on Monday morning following the 2025 French Open, and Swiatek fell two spots to World No. 7. Mirra Andreeva remained at No. 6, and Qinwen Zheng jumped two spots to No. 5.
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That title was her fourth in Paris and third in a row. Swiatek is aiming to become the only woman with four consecutive trophies at the French Open in the Open era, which began in 1968. Monica Seles and Justine Henin both also won three straight.
After falling to World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and missing out on her chance to repeat as French Open champion, Iga Swiatek got real on her loss
On Thursday afternoon, Aryna Sabalenka defeated Iga Swiatek in three sets in the French Open semifinals: 7-6, 4-6, 6-0. The loss ended Swiatek's title defense, 26-match win streak at Roland Garros, and disappointing clay court season.
Iga Swiatek turned things around at Roland-Garros after dropping eight of the first nine games against 12th-seeded Elena Rybakina in the fourth round and put together a 1-6, 6-3, 7-5 victory to extend
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Asianet Newsable on MSNFrench Open 2025: Gauff gives fitting reply to Sabelenka’s Swiatek final remark after Roland Garros triumphThe newly-crowned French Open women’s singles champion Coco Gauff hit back at her final opponent Aryna Sabalenka after she claimed that Iga Swiatek would have won the Roland Garros title, had she not been eliminated from the tournament.
The Frenchwoman entered the French Open with just one WTA main-draw victory to her name and zero experience in a main-draw Grand Slam. Now, the World No. 361 is just one win away from becoming the first French woman to reach the French Open final since Mary Pierce in 2005.
Several female players have spoken out while tournament director Amelie Mauresmo was grilled on the matter and defended the scheduling decisions. Naomi Osaka’s coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, has attempted to shed some light on the thought process behind the WTA Tour snub.