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Roland-Garros wrap - Sat June 6

Andreeva is youngest women’s champion in Paris for 34 years

Mirra Andreeva, Roland-Garros 2026, women's champion
 - Lee Goodall

After three weeks of thrills, spills and surprises at Roland-Garros, the women’s final went according to ranking on Saturday when world No.8 Mirra Andreeva lifted her first Grand Slam trophy.

At 19 years old, Andreeva’s comfortable 6-3, 6-2 victory to bring Polish qualifier Maja Chwalinska’s fairytale run to an end made her the youngest woman to win a Roland-Garros singles title since Monica Seles in 1992.

➡️ Saturday results
➡️ Sunday order of play
➡️ Men’s final preview

The first five games were full of extended, nervy rallies played out in a tricky breeze inside Chatrier as both adapted to the unfamiliar territory of a Grand Slam final. Once Andreeva settled, her quality began to show.

From 2-3 in the first set the teenager went on a run of 10 games to effectively end the contest, and Andreeva finished off the Pole with a backhand winner on match point before dropping to the red clay to celebrate.

I'll never forget these three weeks

Maja Chwalinska

Chwalinska will rise from No.114 in the world to 21 on Monday and afterwards was philosophical about the result.

“I'll never forget these three weeks,” the 24-year-old told the press. "I felt like I have no weapon against her today. She definitely handled the wind much better than me.”

The opening match on Chatrier had seen Spain’s Marcel Granollers and Argentina’s Horacio Zeballos defend their men’s doubles title under a closed Chatrier roof with a 6-4, 6-2 win over Finland’s Harri Heliovaara and Britain’s Henry Patten.

The top seeds won their third major trophy - and their third in the last five Grand Slams - without dropping a set. "I’m 41 years old and this is one of the best moments of my career,” Zeballos told the crowd.

Dutch legend Diede de Groot is back to winning ways at the majors after beating Frenchwoman Ksenia Chasteau 6-1, 6-0 to claim her 24th Grand Slam wheelchair singles title. It’s her first major trophy since hip surgery in 2024.

On Court 14 Tokito Oda continued his dominance at Roland-Garros with a fourth successive men’s wheelchair singles trophy, his ninth Grand Slam overall at just 20 years of age. It came courtesy of a 6-3, 6-3 victory against his great rival Alfie Hewett from Great Britain.

Dutchman Niels Vink was another to collect his ninth Grand Slam singles trophy with a win in the quad singles on Saturday when he beat Turkey’s Ahmet Kaplan. The Dutchman is halfway to a calendar slam after reigning in Melbourne in January.

Tokito Oda / Finale simple messieurs tennis-fauteuil - Roland-Garros 2026

Tokito Oda celebrates victory

Youngster ‘Guto’ Miguel made history for Brazil by becoming his country’s first Roland Garros junior singles champion with a 6-3, 6-4 success against American Michael Antonius.

Another 17-year-old, Alisa Oktiabreva, was too strong for 15-year-old Sun Xinran from China during the girls’ singles final to claim her first junior Grand Slam silverware.

There are just two finals to play on Sunday when the women’s doubles and men’s singles championship matches will be decided on Court Philippe-Chatrier.

The doubles kicks off the Day 15 order of play at 11am, with the Alexander Zverev-Flavio Cobolli men’s final on court at 3pm Paris time.