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Roland Garros begins, Sinner rewrites Masters history
Jannik Sinner completed the Career Golden Masters in Rome before age 25, enters Roland Garros on a 29-match winning streak with Alcaraz sidelined. Day 1 at Roland Garros served up wild upsets and a first-set scare for Djokovic — here's everything that happened in tennis this week.

Weekly tennis digest · May 18–25, 2026
This week's digest covers the slightly extended window from May 18 through Monday morning May 25 — roughly 7.3 days. In that span: Sinner wrapped up his most dominant clay season in the Open Era, three more titles were decided on the ATP and WTA secondary circuits, an injury list swelled to 11 Roland Garros withdrawals, qualifying produced its share of history and heartbreak, and Paris's main draw opened with four former Grand Slam champions gone before Tuesday.
Sinner completes the Career Golden Masters
The Rome final result, completed Sunday May 17, is the lead story this week because its implications define everything that follows.
Jannik Sinner (Italy, world No. 1, age 24) defeated Casper Ruud (Norway, 23rd seed) 6-4, 6-4 to win the 2026 Italian Open at Foro Italico. 1 The win gave him the Career Golden Masters — all nine ATP Masters 1000 titles — making him only the second player in history to achieve the feat, after Novak Djokovic completed it in 2018 at age 31. Sinner did it at 24. 1
He is also the first Italian man to win Rome since Adriano Panatta in 1976 — 50 years — with Italian President Sergio Mattarella in the stands alongside Panatta himself for the trophy ceremony. 2
リンクプレビューを読み込んでいます…
Asked about the moment, Sinner said: "There's no better place to complete this set. I believe for an Italian, it's one of the most special places we play tennis." 2
His 2026 clay-season record now stands at 17-0, having swept Monte-Carlo, Madrid, and Rome — the last player to win all three clay Masters 1000s in a single season was Rafael Nadal in 2010. 1 He carries a 29-match winning streak into Roland Garros, where the French Open is the only Grand Slam he has not won. 3
Casper Ruud, who faces Sinner for only the fifth time in his career (now 0-5), put the task into plain terms: "It feels similar, yes. Jannik hasn't won here 14 times like Rafa did in his career, but he's definitely the ultimate favourite." 4
Secondary titles: Buse, Tien, Navarro, Marcinko
While Sinner was making history in Rome, four other titles were decided across the week.
Hamburg (ATP 500): Ignacio Buse (Peru, age 22, ranked No. 57 entering the week) defeated Tommy Paul (USA, 6th seed) 7-6(6), 4-6, 6-3 to claim his first ATP title. 5 Buse had entered the draw as a qualifier and toppled three top-30 players along the way — Flavio Cobolli (No. 12), Jakub Mensik (No. 28), and then Paul in the final. He is the first Peruvian ATP champion since Luis Horna in 2007 and, per the ATP, only the fourth Peruvian to break the top 50. 6 "It's the best feeling in my entire life for sure," Buse said at the trophy ceremony. 5
Geneva (ATP 250): Learner Tien (USA, age 20, 4th seed) beat Mariano Navone (Argentina) 3-6, 6-3, 7-5 for his second ATP title and first on clay. 7 Tien — coached by Michael Chang, who won the 1989 French Open at age 17 — is now the youngest American man to win a European clay title since Chang did it 37 years ago. His ranking jumped to a career-high No. 18 this week. 6
Strasbourg (WTA 500): Emma Navarro (USA, age 25) defeated top seed Victoria Mboko (Canada, No. 9) 6-0, 5-7, 6-2 to end a 15-month title drought — her third career WTA crown and first on clay. 8 Navarro had entered the week ranked No. 39 after withdrawing from three spring events with a health issue; she exits at No. 25. She beat Iva Jovic (then top 20) and Zhang Shuai en route before dispatching Mboko — an opponent nine years her junior who would have beaten her at the same age, Navarro admitted in her on-court speech. 8
Rabat (WTA 250): Petra Marcinko (Croatia, age 20, ranked No. 76) won her first WTA title when Anhelina Kalinina (Ukraine) retired trailing 6-2, 3-0 with a toe injury. Marcinko had never previously reached a tour-level quarterfinal; she enters Roland Garros at a career-high No. 51. 9

11 Roland Garros withdrawals — and the Alcaraz situation
The most significant story heading into Paris is the absence list. Eleven players withdrew from the Roland Garros main draw before it began. 10
The headline withdrawal is Carlos Alcaraz (Spain, world No. 2, age 22), the two-time defending champion. Alcaraz tore the tendon sheath in his right wrist at the Barcelona Open on April 14 — a condition diagnosed as tenosynovitis, inflammation of the connective tissue around the tendons — and has not competed since. 11 He will also miss Wimbledon, where he was the two-time defending champion. As of May 23, Alcaraz posted that his recovery "is going well" but that he is "still not ready to play." No return timeline has been given. 11 This is the third consecutive clay-court spring in which Alcaraz has been sidelined by injury.
The broader ATP withdrawal list also includes:
- Lorenzo Musetti (Italy, No. 9) — rectus femoris (thigh) tear
- Arthur Fils (France, No. 19) — hip injury; he said before withdrawing: "I'm not even sure I'm at 50%." 10
- Holger Rune (Denmark, No. 43) — recovering from Achilles surgery
- Sebastian Korda, Jack Draper, and Arthur Cazaux also withdrew
On the WTA side, Marketa Vondrousova (Czech Republic, No. 44) was pulled from the draw on a provisional suspension by the ITIA for missing a doping test. Sonay Kartal, Varvara Gracheva, and Veronika Kudermetova also withdrew.
Alcaraz's absence alone will cost him 2,000 ranking points (from his 2024 title defense). Per Tennis365's analysis, this makes it mathematically impossible for Alcaraz to reclaim No. 1 from Sinner even if Alcaraz wins Wimbledon — Sinner's projected post-Wimbledon minimum (11,400 points) would exceed Alcaraz's maximum (8,160). 12
Roland Garros qualifying: Stephens survives, Dimitrov falls
Qualifying ran May 18–23 with 16 men and 16 women earning main-draw spots.
The men's storyline that will be discussed longest: Grigor Dimitrov (Bulgaria, 2017 ATP Finals champion, former world No. 3) lost in the first qualifying round to Jaime Faria (Portugal) — his first major qualifying appearance since the 2011 Australian Open. 13 Faria went on to qualify. On the women's side, Karolína Plíšková (Czech Republic, former world No. 1) lost in the second round to Marina Bassols Ribera — her first major qualifying appearance since the 2012 US Open. 14 Bianca Andreescu (Canada, 2019 US Open champion) was also eliminated in the second qualifying round after missing five consecutive Grand Slam main draws. 13
The comebacks: Sloane Stephens (USA, ranked No. 361) qualified for her 14th Roland Garros main draw — but for the first time through qualifying, after 13 consecutive direct main-draw appearances from 2011 to 2024. The 2018 Roland Garros finalist came back from a set down in her final-round match against Leyre Romero Gormaz to win 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. 15
On the men's side, Andrea Pellegrino (Italy, age 29) earned his Grand Slam main-draw debut in his 17th qualifying attempt by defeating 2018 Roland Garros semifinalist Marco Cecchinato 7-6(5), 6-2 in the final round. 16 France led all nations with four men through qualifying (Jacquet, Faurel, Herbert, Pavlovic); Bolivia placed two (Juan Carlos Prado Ángelo and Hugo Dellien), a notable achievement for a country rarely represented in Grand Slam main draws.
Day 1 at Roland Garros: four former champions ousted, one wild card stuns
The main draw opened Sunday, May 24. Day 1 confirmed this is an unusually open tournament.
The biggest result: American wild card Nishesh Basavareddy (world No. 156, age 21) defeated 7th seed Taylor Fritz (USA, 2024 US Open finalist) 7-6(5), 7-6(5), 6-7(9), 6-1 on Court Suzanne-Lenglen for the biggest men's upset of the day. 17 Fritz had played only one clay-court match in the previous two months after knee tendinitis forced him off the tour in late March. He conceded as much: "I felt like I'd play one match on anti-inflammatories, feel good, and then after one match I'd be playing through a lot of pain even on the anti-inflammatories. So that's just not sustainable." 17 This was Fritz's second consecutive first-round exit at Roland Garros.
Britain's Francesca Jones covers her face in tears after her first Grand Slam match win over Beatriz Haddad Maia — an emotional end to a 2026 that included a gym accident serious enough that the hospital warned her she could have needed brain surgery. 18
リンクプレビューを読み込んでいます…
On the women's side, Britain's Francesca Jones (ranked No. 102) delivered the upset of the women's draw, defeating 14th seed Beatriz Haddad Maia (Brazil) 1-6, 7-6(4), 6-2 — coming back from a set and a break down, in her first career Grand Slam match win after six first-round losses across all four majors. Jones was born with Ectrodactyly Ectodermal Dysplasia (EEC syndrome), plays with a modified racquet grip, and spent the early part of 2026 recovering from a gym accident in which a 45kg weight fell on her head and knee. "The hospital said to me I was lucky not to be in surgery or have a brain bleed with the way it happened," she said after the match. 18 She called this year "arguably the hardest moment of my career." 18
Four former Grand Slam champions were also eliminated on Day 1, all in the women's draw: 19
| Player | Former title | Defeated by | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sofia Kenin (USA) | 2020 Australian Open | Peyton Stearns | 6-3, 6-3 |
| Barbora Krejcikova (Czech Republic) | 2021 Roland Garros | Hailey Baptiste [26] | 6-7(7), 7-6(6), 6-2 |
| Emma Raducanu (Great Britain) | 2021 US Open | Solana Sierra | 6-0, 7-6(4) |
| Sloane Stephens (USA) | 2017 US Open | Sara Bejlek | 6-3, 6-2 |
Krejcikova's loss was to the one seeded opponent in the group (Baptiste, No. 26); the other three lost to unseeded players. Raducanu had been managing the after-effects of a viral illness through most of the spring.
Novak Djokovic (Serbia, 3rd seed, age 39) survived a scare but advanced, rallying from 5-7, 7-5, 6-1, 6-4 against Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard (France, 6'7") — the first time Djokovic has dropped a set in a Roland Garros first round since 2010. 20 Djokovic, who turned 39 on May 22 and had played only 11 singles matches in 2026 before Paris, acknowledged the difficulty: "In a match like that, you have to stay focussed and wait for an opportunity." 20
Alexander Zverev (Germany, 2nd seed), who withdrew from Hamburg with a back injury, beat Benjamin Bonzi (France, wild card) 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 with no apparent physical issues. Zverev visited a specialist in Germany for treatment after Rome and said he felt "ready to go." 21
The day also produced a notable retirement: Canada's Gabriel Diallo (No. 49) quit against James Duckworth while trailing 6-3, 4-1, citing heat — it reached 33°C in Paris on Day 1 — combined with a lingering back problem. "That's mainly what it was. It was getting worse and worse," Diallo said. 22
Note: Sinner's R1 match vs. French wild card Clément Tabur (No. 165) and Sabalenka's match vs. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro were both scheduled Monday, May 25, after this digest's cutoff. Results will lead next week's edition.
Rankings update
ATP Top 10 as of May 25: 23
| Rank | Player | Points | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jannik Sinner (ITA) | 14,750 | — |
| 2 | Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) | 11,960 | — |
| 3 | Alexander Zverev (GER) | 5,705 | — |
| 4 | Novak Djokovic (SRB) | 4,460 | — |
| 5 | Ben Shelton (USA) | 4,070 | +1 |
| 6 | Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN) | 4,050 | −1 |
| 7 | Alex de Minaur (AUS) | 3,855 | +2 |
| 8 | Daniil Medvedev (RUS) | 3,760 | −1 |
| 9 | Taylor Fritz (USA) | 3,720 | −1 |
| 10 | Alexander Bublik (KAZ) | 3,320 | — |
Sinner's lead over Alcaraz has grown to 2,790 points — and with Alcaraz unable to compete at Roland Garros (where he has 2,000 points to defend), the gap will widen further by the end of the fortnight. 12 Ignacio Buse surged +26 to a career-high No. 31; Tommy Paul rose +5 to No. 21 after reaching the Hamburg final. Hubert Hurkacz fell 21 spots to No. 99, on the edge of dropping out of the top 100. Learner Tien rose to a career-high No. 18.
WTA Top 10 as of May 25: 24
| Rank | Player | Points | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aryna Sabalenka (BLR) | 9,960 | — |
| 2 | Elena Rybakina (KAZ) | 8,313 | — |
| 3 | Iga Swiatek (POL) | 7,273 | — |
| 4 | Coco Gauff (USA) | 6,749 | — |
| 5 | Jessica Pegula (USA) | 6,286 | — |
| 6 | Amanda Anisimova (USA) | 5,958 | — |
| 7 | Elina Svitolina (UKR) | 4,315 | +8 |
| 8 | Mirra Andreeva (RUS) | 4,181 | — |
| 9 | Victoria Mboko (CAN) | 3,710 | — |
| 10 | Karolina Muchova (CZE) | 3,318 | — |
Emma Navarro climbed +14 to No. 25; Petra Marcinko jumped +25 to a career-high No. 51. Zheng Qinwen (China) has fallen to No. 56 — a dramatic drop from her previous top-5 status — and Stefanos Tsitsipas continues his slide at No. 79.
Seven Ukrainian women now sit inside the WTA top 100: Svitolina (No. 7), Kostyuk (No. 15), Yastremska (No. 45), Starodubtseva (No. 54), Oliynykova (No. 66), Kalinina (No. 60), and Snigur (No. 95). 25
What to watch at Roland Garros
Men's draw outlook: Sinner is on one half of the draw; Djokovic is on the other, meaning they cannot meet before the final. With Alcaraz gone, the men's title effectively comes down to whether anyone — Zverev, Djokovic, Medvedev, Shelton — can beat Sinner in a best-of-five clay-court match. Zverev has reached at least the quarterfinals in six of his last eight appearances at Roland Garros, including finals in 2024; his back is the main question mark. 21
Sinner is chasing a career Grand Slam — Roland Garros is the only major title missing from his collection.
Women's draw outlook: Sabalenka (world No. 1) has never won Roland Garros and was runner-up to Gauff in 2025. She enters with lower back concerns that flared in Rome. Gauff is attempting to become only the third woman to defend the Roland Garros title this century, after Justine Henin and Iga Swiatek. Svitolina, ranked No. 7, is 8-0 in clay-court finals and beat three of the top four players in succession in Rome. Swiatek is working with a new coach, Francisco Roig (who coached Nadal), after her 26-match Roland Garros win streak ended in the 2025 semifinals. 26
Farewell appearances: Stan Wawrinka (Switzerland, age 41), the 2015 Roland Garros champion, and Gaël Monfils (France, age 39) are both making their final appearances at the tournament before retiring at the end of 2026. Monfils put it simply: "My bucket list is full." 4
Key dates: R2 begins May 27; quarterfinals June 1–2; women's final June 6; men's final June 7. No other ATP or WTA events run alongside Roland Garros from now through June 7. 27
Cover image: Jannik Sinner holds the 2026 Italian Open trophy at Foro Italico. Image from Sky Sports.
参考ソース
- 1Sky Sports: Sinner beats Ruud in Italian Open final
- 2The Guardian: Sinner makes history with Italian Open title
- 3ESPN: Sinner opens career Grand Slam bid vs wild card
- 4The National: French Open talking points
- 5Reuters via The Star: Buse beats Paul to win Hamburg
- 6ATP Tour: Buse marches into Top 40, Mover of Week
- 7BBC Sport: Navarro wins Strasbourg as Buse wins Hamburg
- 8Tennis.com: Navarro soars back into Top 30
- 9WTA: Rankings Watch — Navarro, Marcinko boosted by title runs
- 10Tennis365: French Open withdrawal list
- 11Heavy.com: Alcaraz out of French Open
- 12Tennis365: When could Alcaraz regain No. 1 from Sinner?
- 13TennisUpToDate: Roland Garros qualifying — big names out
- 14Wikipedia: 2026 French Open women's qualifying
- 15TennisWorldUSA: Stephens makes it past qualifying
- 16ATP Tour: Who qualified for Roland Garros on Thursday?
- 17Tennis Majors: Basavareddy beats Fritz
- 18BBC Sport: Jones breaks through after hardest moment of career
- 19Yahoo Sports: 4 WTA Grand Slam champions ousted on Day 1
- 20BBC Sport: Djokovic beats Mpetshi Perricard
- 21Tennis365: Zverev injury update ahead of Roland Garros
- 22CBC Sports: Diallo forced to retire at French Open
- 23ATP Tour: PIF ATP Rankings
- 24ESPN: 2026 WTA Rankings
- 25Tennis.com: Svitolina and Kostyuk — new perspectives on court
- 26Sky Sports: French Open draw — Sinner primed for career Grand Slam
- 27CBS Sports: 2026 French Open draw, schedule, bracket
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