תפריט כתבה
History-making qualifier Chwalinska sets up Andreeva French Open final
Poland's Maja Chwalinska beats Diana Shnaider to reach French Open final and makes history after qualifying run.
תפריט כתבה
Poland's Maja Chwalinska beats Diana Shnaider to reach French Open final and makes history after qualifying run.
Maja Chwalinska made French Open history on Thursday as the world number 114 became the first qualifier in the professional era to reach the Roland Garros final, where she will take on Mirra Andreeva.Should she best Andreeva in the final, Chwalinska will become just the second woman to come through qualifying and win a Grand Slam final in any major since the Open era began, after Emma Raducanu's title run at the US Open in 2021.
Qualifier Maja Chwalinska is one win away from a fairytale French Open triumph as she sets up a final showdown against Russian teenager Mirra Andreeva.
Britain's Henry Patten and Finland's Harri Heliovaara book their place in Saturday's French Open men's doubles final.
Polish world number 114 Maja Chwalinska made French Open history on Thursday as she beat Diana Shnaider in straight sets to become the first qualifier to go all the way to the final at Roland Garros in the professional era.Appearing in her first main draw in Paris, Chwalinska, who had on three previous occasions failed to qualify for Roland Garros, has won nine matches across her three-week French Open campaign to stand on the brink of glory.
Russian Mirra Andreeva required just 76 minutes to sweep semifinal foe Marta Kostyuk on Thursday and clinch a ticket to the 2026 French Open finale.
Mirra Andreeva advanced to her first Grand Slam final with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over Marta Kostyuk in the French Open semifinals.
No handshake and no photo as Mirra Andreeva of Russia beats Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine to reach French Open final.
Qualifier Maja Chwalinska is one win away from a fairytale French Open triumph as she sets up a final showdown against Russian teenager Mirra Andreeva.
PARIS — Mirra Andreeva is heading to the French Open final. On a breezy, cool day in Paris, the 19-year-old Russian took advantage of a tight and nervous version of Marta Kostyuk, the 23-year-old from Ukraine who had not lost a match in more than two months. Andreeva did what quality players do when they see an opponent decomposing 80 feet away. She kept her foot on the gas, kept the ball in the court and cruised to a 6-1, 6-3 win in just shy of 80 minutes. For nearly five weeks of the clay-cour