A star is born as Andreeva eases into Grand Slam winners' club

Published 07 Jun, 2026 11:10am 5 min read
Russia's Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy after winning the French Open title in Paris. -- Reuters
Russia's Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy after winning the French Open title in Paris. -- Reuters

Mirra Andreeva announced herself as the latest member of women’s tennis’s elite on Saturday when she beat surprise finalist Maja Chwalinska 6-3, 6-2 to become the youngest French ​Open champion in more than three decades.

The 19-year-old Russian, long regarded as one of the sport’s brightest prospects, delivered on her promise on the biggest stage of all, ‌claiming a maiden Grand Slam title and joining the select group of active major champions led by players such as Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff.

In doing so, Andreeva became the youngest women’s singles champion at Roland Garros since Monica Seles won her third consecutive title in Paris in 1992, a milestone that underlined the Russian’s precocious talent and the scale of her achievement.

“I’ll be honest, I’ve done a lot of visualisations before. Not just this ​tournament, but I’ve had dreams, I’ve had a lot of thoughts on how it’s going to happen, if it’s going to happen, when it’s going to happen, where,” Andreeva told ​reporters.

Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters
Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters

“I would say the feeling in real life is so much better, obviously, than in your dreams… looking at this trophy and realising that ⁠this is actually true, and I can call myself a Grand Slam champion.”

While Chwalinska’s remarkable run from qualifying captured the imagination and triggered praise from the greats of the game over the ​past fortnight, the final belonged to a player who increasingly looks equipped to shape the sport’s future.

As the 24-year-old Pole struggled to reproduce the tactical brilliance that had carried her through nine successive victories, ​Andreeva grew stronger with every game, imposing her power, absorbing the pressure and leaving little doubt that a new force has arrived at the top of the women’s game.

“These feelings are extra special. Now I’m already thinking of how I’m going to prepare for the grass season,” she said.

“This thing is a bit addictive, and I really want to do my best to experience all of this for the second time.”

Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy as Poland’s Maja Chwalinska celebrates with the runners-up trophy alongside former tennis player Mary Pierce and President of the FFT Gilles Moretton after their final match at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters
Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates with the trophy as Poland’s Maja Chwalinska celebrates with the runners-up trophy alongside former tennis player Mary Pierce and President of the FFT Gilles Moretton after their final match at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters

Rankings jump

Chwalinska, however, is now ​allowed to dream of joining the club.

Despite her below-par performance in the final, she will now jump to 21st in the world rankings.

There was no sign of a changing of the guard ​in the men’s doubles as Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos retained the title with a dominant 6-4, 6-2 win over Harri Heliovaara and Henry Patten, claiming their third Grand Slam title as a pair.

Spaniard Granollers and Argentine ‌Zeballos, who initially ⁠paired up in 2019, won the French Open and US Open last year and justified their top seeding, having not dropped a set in their 2026 Roland Garros campaign.

The women’s title featured two Grand Slam final debutants, and the most experienced, albeit the youngest, prevailed on a windswept Court Philippe Chatrier.

Eighth-seeded Andreeva’s heavy groundstrokes began to penetrate through the wind while Chwalinska’s trademark touch and variety increasingly deserted her, allowing the Russian to take command of the contest.

The opening set was a tense affair, with both players struggling to cope with the pressure of a maiden Grand Slam final.

Marathon game

Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters
Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters

Chwalinska, ​only the second woman in the professional era ​to come through qualifying and reach a ⁠Grand Slam final after Britain’s Emma Raducanu won the 2021 US Open, survived a marathon opening service game in which she saved three break points with a mixture of delicate drop shots and bold winners.

Neither player, however, could establish control.

Breaks were traded repeatedly, Andreeva surrendering one service game with two ​double faults while Chwalinska’s forehand often let her down.

Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters
Russia’s Mirra Andreeva celebrates after winning her final match against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska at the French Open in Paris. – Reuters

At 3-3, Andreeva began finding greater depth and weight off her wings, pushing Chwalinska behind ​the baseline and growing in ⁠confidence, even smiling after netting an easy overhead smash.

She broke for 4-3 when Chwalinska netted a sliced backhand, consolidated for 5-3 and then capitalised on another nervous service game to claim the opening set.

The Russian carried that momentum into the second, breaking immediately and again for a 4-0 lead as Chwalinska struggled to contain her opponent’s relentless pressure.

Russia’s Mirra Andreeva in action against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska during her final of the French Open in Paris. – Reuters
Russia’s Mirra Andreeva in action against Poland’s Maja Chwalinska during her final of the French Open in Paris. – Reuters

The Pole briefly threatened a comeback, recovering one break and reducing the deficit ⁠to 5-2, ​but Andreeva remained unmoved, sealing the biggest victory of her young career with a crisp crosscourt backhand winner on her ​opponent’s serve.

The triumph earned Andreeva $3.22 million in prize money, while Chwalinska collected $1.61 million, roughly double her career earnings before arriving in Paris.

“It’ll be different, for sure, but I think, and I hope, I’ll adapt. I’ll definitely work hard,” Chwalinska said.

“I need ​to continue to stay in the present and give my all to be a better player every day.”

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