
This Coco Gauff artwork ??
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) June 10, 2025
?? @claudialocurcio pic.twitter.com/8ye4NPeybG


#1 - THE RISE OF FRANÇAISE FOREHAND | ...a year after missing out on her slam debut at RG with a knee injury, #361-ranked French wild card Lois Boisson makes an historic run to the semifinals in Paris in just her second tour-level MD event, upsetting three seeds and two Top 10 players (#3 Pegula, #6 Andreeva), then making a subsequent 296-spot jump in the WTA rankings to #65, the tour's largest rise into the Top 100 this century |
#2 - PEAK THUNDER | ...the Latvian takes her first clay title since the 2017 RG, becoming the first player in thirteen years to defeat the world #1 (Sabalenka) and #2 (Swiatek, improving to 6-0 vs. Iga) in the same event on clay |
#3 - COCO COUTURE | ...Gauff completes her Madrid-Rome-Paris final appearance trifecta with a win in the Roland Garros title match over #1 Sabalenka to claim her second major crown |
#4 - LIVE LIKE PAOLINI! | ...Jasmine Paolini becomes the first Italian woman to win Rome in forty years (Reggi), then claims the doubles title (w/ Errani), as well, to complete the first Italian Open sweep since 1990 (Seles) |
#5 - ¡MUY BUENO! ARYNA | ...a year after being unable to convert 3 MP in the final in her Madrid title defense, Sabalenka wins the indoor clay event for the third time (odd-year runs in 2021, '23 and '25) |
#6 - SARA SWEEPS PARIS | ...Sara Errani played what she says is her final singles match during RG qualifying, then she went out and swept the doubles and mixed titles in Paris. Her WD title is her first slam win with Jasmine Paolini (they won Gold in Paris last summer, and defended their Rome title earlier this spring), while the MX is her second in the last three majors with Andrea Vavassori (they also won the Indian Wells exhibition back in March). Errani is a former RG singles finalist (2012), and completed a Career Doubles Slam with Roberta Vinci more than a decade ago. |
#7 - KAMIJI'S OPPORTUNISTIC ERA | ...once a fairly dominant wheelchair #1 before the rise of Diede de Groot, Yui Kamiji has seized upon the opportunity of a limited (at the Paralympics), absent (year-end Masters, then AO) and now not-100% Dutch star to sweep the last four big wheelchair singles events. In Paris, she claimed both the singles and doubles titles at RG, her first slam sweep since 2020. |
#8 - A MAYA JOINT JOINT x 2 | ...in Rabat, 19-year old Aussie Maya Joint wins everything, taking the singles and doubles titles in her maiden appearances in a WTA final in both |
HM- A TRIPLE CROWN WINNING DASHA | ...Dasha Vidmanova claims the NCAA women's singles championship and leads Georgia to the women's team title, completing (w/ her NCAA doubles title from last year) the rare "Triple Crown" for her career. She's just the third woman to do it at the D1 level. |

This is soooo... ?? https://t.co/TmfPDlCDlx pic.twitter.com/Tltp5VzF1W
— LorenaPopa ???????? (@popalorena) April 15, 2025
Afterward, Boisson won the unofficial award for the best social media comeback...
Have to love this response from Lois Boisson to Harriet Dart's comment... pic.twitter.com/LFlbcbAr5I
— Mike Pavitt (@michael_pavitt) April 15, 2025
While Dart was left to ask for public foregiveness...
Harriet Dart apologizes for asking the umpire to tell her opponent to wear deodorant. pic.twitter.com/YHpgMQgMak
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 15, 2025
After this event, of course, Boisson went on to win a challenger title and then reached the Roland Garros semifinals as a wild card; while Dart didn't win another match the rest of the spring clay season. The Tennis Gods remain un-de-feated.
Elena Rybakina says she’s been driving her team around since winning the Porsche in Stuttgart & getting her license last year:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 10, 2025
“I’ve been going around with the team. I was dropping and taking everybody… so I was kind of a driver” ??
pic.twitter.com/sfo0jLduuH
Hmmm, maybe this explains a lot. Does anyone believe in the idea of time travel and/or (temporary) bodysnatching?
The first sign of Michael Jordan’s greatness was when they realized he was as athletic as Toby Kidd. pic.twitter.com/0L2Kvoh4UL
— Super 70s Sports (@Super70sSports) April 26, 2025
Coco Gauff hits a serve but doesn’t realize Qinwen Zheng wasn’t at the baseline ??????
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 15, 2025
pic.twitter.com/wK6g44ztRa
When you forget your rackets ?? @CocoGauff pic.twitter.com/bG3hbaTuWW
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 27, 2025
Interesting tennis fact: Racquets are kinda not optional if you wanna play.... pic.twitter.com/zOmpr9lUPd
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 27, 2025
oops, forgot the last one pic.twitter.com/ajqcgFg6mn
— Coco Gauff (@CocoGauff) May 27, 2025
It started with an empty bag, and ended with an extra piece of luggage to take home.. pic.twitter.com/9kBiXCAQCD
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 7, 2025
Never change Coco ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/KzLpBW7SOY
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 7, 2025
Qinwen accidentally hitting the meanest kick serve of the year pic.twitter.com/Y7GoNV4x5Y
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) May 15, 2025
Hmmm, blow out an opponent (Anna Blinkova) that you know you won't have to shake hands with at the net, underarm serve her on MP... then win "Shot of the Month? Somehow it feels like this announcement should have rightly come on April 1st rather than April 11.
underarm ace ?????
— wta (@WTA) April 11, 2025
The shot of the month winner for March is.... @marta_kostyuk!
Presented by @CorpayFX pic.twitter.com/2D7uBPoj2K
It was funny how the #WTRallyTheWorld monstosity of a marketing campaign pretty much completely disappeared from social media for many months, then suddenly rose from its grave at the start of RG with a few videos (Kessler, Shnaider, Haddad Maia, Baptiste and Ostapenko, I think) and then just crawled back down into its dark, musty hole in the ground all over again.
forging your own path.#WTARallyTheWorld pic.twitter.com/VBdsk0FfGI
— wta (@WTA) May 26, 2025
I guess I *kinda* like the initial graphic with the player's name, but (nothing against McCartney, as it was the same in the other videos) you forget you even watched the video two seconds after it concludes.
Sara Bejelk had quite the final month of the clay season, qualifying for RG, notching her first career MD win in a major, winning a 125 title after exiting Paris, *and* being the subject of what might prove to be the Photo of the Year.
As previously noted in this space, Coco Gauff is arguably the most consistently photogenic in-action star in the WTA...
Photo of the Day
— Christopher Clarey ???? ???? ???? (@christophclarey) April 30, 2025
The Coco Backhand
?? Julian Finney pic.twitter.com/86xA4fjQ5S
Some make the effort, some don't. Madrid is definitely the former, as the tournament offers a unique trophy *every* year...
Aryna Sabalenka and the 2025 Madrid trophy.
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 3, 2025
Really cool that the tournament comes up with a brand new trophy design every year, making each trophy completely unique. pic.twitter.com/2AwVYEAUxw
The wryly funny and self-deprecating, but also sweetly introspective on what might have been the most memorable day of her tennis career had things gone another way, stylings of The Bracelet herself, Aleksandra Krunic...
If you didn’t hear Aleksandra Krunic’s speech after finishing runner up in the women’s doubles, it was highly entertaining! pic.twitter.com/dEUarC4pbp
— Kvittycat (@kvittycat53) June 8, 2025
BTW, I loved how she started walking back and forth "mid-set" with the microphone, gathering herself, like she was a stand-up talking to the crowd at a comedy club.

MOST IMPROVED | DOUBLES |
---|---|
1. Hailey Baptiste, USA | 1. Errani/Paolini, ITA/ITA |
2. Lois Boisson, FRA | 2. Cirstea/Kalinskaya, ROU/RUS |
3. Victoria Mboko, CAN | 3. V.Kudermetova/Mertens, RUS/BEL |
4. Maya Joint, AUS | 4. Eric Routliffe, NZL |
5. Sara Bejlek, CZE | 5. Aleksandra Krunic, SRB |
6. Emiliana Arango, COL | 6. Ostapenko/Routliffe, LAT/NZL |
7. Leyre Romero Gormaz, ESP | 7. Dabrowski/Routliffe, CAN/NZL |
8. Moyuka Uchijima, JPN | 8. Danilina/Krunic, KAZ/SRB |
9. Anca Todoni, ROU | 9. Cristina Bucsa, ESP |
10. Tiantsoah Sarah Rakotomanga Rajaonah, FRA | 10. Babos/Stefani, HUN/BR |
11. Yuliia Starodubtseva, UKR | HM- Eikeri/Hozumi, NED/JPN |
12. Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva, AND | HM- M.Andreeva/Shnaider, RUS/RUS |
ITF | TEAM |
---|---|
1. Mayar Sherif, EGY | 1. Errani/Vavassori, ITA/ITA (MX) |
2. F.Jorge/M.Jorge, POR/POR | 2. ESP BJK Cup |
3. Anastasia Zakharova, RUS | 3. GBR BJK Cup |
4. Julia Grabher, AUT | 4. NED WC World Team Cup |
5. Anna Bondar, HUN | 5. JPN BJK Cup |
HM- Wakana Sonobe, JPN | HM- Georgia Bulldogs (NCAA) |
HM- Iva Jovic, USA | HM- Townsend/King, USA/USA (MX) |
COACH | [PLAYER] |
---|---|
1. Matt Daly | [Gauff] |
2. Marc Lopez | [Paolini] |
3. M.Knowles/M.Merklein | [Pegula] |
4. Anton Dubrov | [Sabalenka] |
5. Blaž Kavčič | [Stearns] |
6. Pere Riba | [Zheng] |
7. Andrew Bettles | [Svitolina] |
8. Conchita Martinez | [M.Andreeva] |
9. Igor Andreev | [Alexandrova] |
10. E.Hechtman/F.Tiafoe | [Baptiste] |
HM- Patrick Mouratoglou | [Osaka] |
WHEELCHAIR | JUNIOR |
---|---|
1. Yui Kamiji, JPN | 1. Lilli Tagger, AUT |
2. Li Xiaohui, CHN | 2. Julieta Pareja, USA |
3. Aniek Van Koot, NED | 3. Penickova/Penickova, USA/USA |
4. Kamiji/Montjane, JPN/RSA | 4. Hannah Klugman, GBR |
5. Vitoria Miranda, BRA (jr) | 5. Bennemann/Zhenikhova, GER/GER |
6. Zhu Zhenzhen, CHN | 6. Kovackova/Kovackova,CZE/CZE |
7. Li/Wang, CHN/CHN | 7. Charo Esquiva Banuls, ESP |
8. Diede de Groot, NED | 8. Julia Stusek, GER |
HM- Gryp/Miranda, BEL/BRA (jr) | 9. Luna Vujovic, SRB |
-- | 10. Rositsa Dencheva, BUL |
-- | HM- Ksenia Efremova, FRA |
TOP BJK Q PLAYERS | TOP BJK Q CAPTAINS |
---|---|
1. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, ESP | 1. Carla Suarez Navarro, ESP |
2. Moyuka Uchijima, JPN | 2. Anne Keothavong, GBR |
3. Elina Svitolina, UKR | 3. Ai Sugiyama, JPN |
4. Sonay Kartal, GBR | 4. Lindsay Davenport, USA |
5. Aoyama/Shibahara, JPN | 5. Illya Marchenko, UKR |
6. Aoyama/Shibahara, JPN | 6. Elise Tamaela, NED (L) |
7. Boulter/Burrage, GBR | 7. Heidi El Tabakh, CAN (L) |
8. Victoria Mboko, CAN | 8. Matej Liptak, SVK (L) |
9. Suzan Lamens, NED | HM- Yuriy Schukin, KAZ |
10. Elena Rybakina, KAZ | |
HM- Pera/USA, Bucsa/ESP, Baptiste/USA, Putintseva/KAZ, Vedder/NED, Naef/SUI |


"Victory belongs to the most tenacious"
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 1, 2025
It's right on top of the building, and she's living it. pic.twitter.com/OJetpA3lVv
For most of the #5-seeded, three-time defending and four-time Roland Garros champion's 4th Round match vs. #12 Rybakina, the bizarro world in which the former #1 has been residing over the past twelve months had finally intruded upon her "sacred ground." Sure, the Pole lost on the terre battue in Paris during last year's Olympics, but that's a "footnote tournament." This was Roland-bleepin'-Garros, where Swiatek virtually made her name, built the foundation of the eventual Hall of Fame career, and even celebrates her birthday every May. What Rybakina was doing to her for a set and change on Day 8 was almost offensive in that light. It was as if she'd stormed into Swiatek's home, raided her panty, prepared herself a meal and sat down right in front of Iga and started to gobble it down... after taking a fork from Swiatek's grasp to eat it all with, while Iga could only look on helplessly. Swiatek had suffered some truly awful loses of late, including on her favored clay this spring. But not at Roland Garros. This was an entirely different animal. While Rybakina had won seven straight clay matches this season, Swiatek had won *24* straight in RG play since 2022, was closing in on the all-time women's streak record of 29 (a 44-year old mark held by Chris Evert) as well as getting ever more near to getting the chance to become the first in the Open era to win the women's title four straight years. But there was Rybakina, rocking Swiatek's world. Right out of the gate, the Kazakh was dominant. Up love/40 in Swiatek's first service game, she broke to lead 2-0. Swiatek tried serving bigger, but it didn't help. Rybakina's big shots continued to overwhelm her. 4-0. 5-0. Suddenly, everyone had to look up Swiatek's last love set lost at RG (vs. Simona Halep, 2019 4r). The Pole was bageled by Madison Keys in a set earlier this spring, and nearly so by both Coco Gauff and Danielle Collins, as well. But this was Roland Garros. Rybakina held a SP to win 6-0, but couldn't pull it off. Swiatek DF'd on a GP in game 6, but held to get on the board. Rybakina won the 1st set 6-1, "bullying" (in the words of TNT's Lindsay Davenport) the defending champ on her favorite surface on her favorite court, and didn't seem phased by much of anything early in the 2nd, either.
Elena Rybakina speeds through the opening set, 6-1! #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/KMslu2UGGq
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
Swiatek double-faulted to lose the opening game of the set at love, then saw Rybakina hold at love to lead 2-0. Was this how the streak was going to end, with a funereal silence on Chatrier and all the headlines and dark comments about Swiatek's ongoing plight that would come along with it? But then something weird happened. Swiatek tried something different. She took a few steps back to return Rybakina's big serve, giving herself time to get a look at it and get into the rally, where she likely could carve out an advantage. It seems like a small, sensible and common in-match alteration of tactics against a big hitter when things aren't going well, but Swiatek has seemingly (stubbornly) refused to do it in such situations for well on more than a year, hoping to outduel her opponent or betting on her cracking in order to turn the tide. It's worked out for her on occasion, but why not give it a chance more often? It's been a lingering mystery, through two different coaching regimes, as Swiatek has often fallen victim, or struggled to pull out victories, against foes who hit deep and hard and don't give her much time to react. Apparently, the notion of being embarrased and ridden out of Roland Garros in a clown car was finally enough to properly view what has been a reality all along. With her blinders finally off, though Rybakina didn't suddenly become a pushover as a result, things started to slowly turn in Swiatek's favor. She reached BP on Rybakina serve in game 4. The Kazakh erased it with a big serve, but on BP #2 Rybakina avoided hitting an overhead volley into the open court and instead tried to direct the ball behind a scrambling Swiatek on the baseline. The ball flew out, putting the 2nd back on serve. A game later, Swiatek held in a long service game in which she faced an early BP, had multiple DF (plus two more BP) and traversed six deuce points en route to a hold and her first lead at 3-2. Another break of Rybakina's serve made it 4-2, as the Pole won the set 6-3 to knot the match. Rybakina seemed to push Swiatek near the match edge in the 3rd, and briefly had a chance to force the four-time champ to a familiar place where she's often looked panicked in the past against big hitters like herself. She just needed a lead that would make Swiatek play from behind, vs. a streaking opponent, with almost-sure defeat "visible from here" without a tennis miracle suddenly taking place. Rybakina held for 3-2 when Swiatek netted an easy volley, then violently slammed her racket down in anger on the net cord (she received no warning from chair umpire Kader Nouni). Rybakina grabbed a 15/40 lead on Iga's serve in the following game, one point from a 4-2 and serving for 5-2 edge that would *truly* test Swiatek's mettle. If she could only...
Rybakina painting the line ???#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/XThAW5XXte
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 1, 2025
But rather than "put Iga in the corner," Rybakina saw Swiatek fight her way out of one, saving three BP and tie the score at 3-all. Reinvigorated, Swiatek fired a series of deep returns (two off the baseline) and took at 15/40 lead in game 7, breaking to assume the overall match lead for the first time at 4-3. Rybakina still had time of her own, and took advantage with a love/30 lead, then BP chances at 15/40 after stepping in and whacking a return winner. A Swiatek DF on BP #2 put the set back on serve, giving the Kazakh another chance to see the finish line and dare Swiatek to keep her crossing it. Rybakina nearly gave the break back, DF'ing on BP only to see Nouni overrule the call and present her with a lifeline. She grabbed it, holding to take a 5-4 lead. But after maneuvering her way through what had become a tricky spot, Rybakina threw in a clunker of a game at precisely the worst time. A poor drop shot attempt landed at mid-court, allowing Swiatek to put it away for a 15/40 lead. Rybakina's forehand error a point later gave Iga a 6-5 lead and put the match on her racket. Having overcome a would-be disastrous start, and having survived nearly slipping down another frustration-filled hole that again put her on the brink of defeat in the 3rd set, Swiatek now only needed to hold to keep her latest Roland Garros dream alive. She did just that, winning 1-6/6-3/7-5.
Her house!
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 1, 2025
Epic comeback from defending champ Iga Swiatek after dropping a quick first set against Elena Rybakina firing on all cylinders. pic.twitter.com/goP2Uto20v
With her 25th straight RG victory, Swiatek takes the head-to-head lead (at 5-4, 3-0 in '25) over Rybakina, and gets her first win over the on clay (the Kazakh had been 2-0, and the only player with multiple wins over her on the surface).
Even we need a breather after that ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) April 30, 2025
Sabalenka saves a set point to take the 80-minute opener in a tiebreak.#MMOpen pic.twitter.com/q7IbG230AD
The heart of a fighter! ??@SabalenkaA passes Kostyuk's test and is into the semifinals! #MMOpen pic.twitter.com/XtAXeXfPwp
— wta (@WTA) April 30, 2025
what a match!!!! ??@peyton_stearns outlasts Osaka in a thriller to reach the Rome quarterfinals: 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(4)!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/jWCdK8F3WP
— wta (@WTA) May 12, 2025
Peyton Stearns threw up immediately after her win over Naomi Osaka.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 12, 2025
She also threw up before the 3rd set tiebreak.
It took a special kind of effort to get over the line today.
Warrior. ??????
pic.twitter.com/rCMpCDb4ol
Peyton Stearns, you're a MAD WOMAN ????
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
The American makes it THREE straight 7-6 wins in the third to reach her maiden WTA 1000 semifinal!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/ZYjnP5T3FH
A stunning comeback from Svitolina ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
From 2-4 30-40 down, the no.16 seed wins four games in a row to force a decider vs Stearns.#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/9EHVQ63SzA
Having escaped a straight sets loss, Svitolina seemed to be set to run away with the 3rd. She took a double-break 3-0 lead in the decider, then -- after the Bannerette had gotten the set back on serve -- briefly reclaimed a break edge (at 4-3) before being forced into a final tie-break. Stearns had one more deficit to overcome, rallying from a mini-break down at 3-1, ultimately sweeping the final four points to notch a 7-4 win in the breaker.
There’s something about Peyton and Rome ??@peyton_stearns plays a fantastic match to defeat Svitolina in an EPIC 6-2, 4-6, 7-6(4)!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/p9713EKGna
— wta (@WTA) May 13, 2025
Unfortunately for Stearns, the tough road to earn her maiden seed at a slam ended with the Bannerette being dumped out in the 1st Round in Paris a few weeks later.
Remember the name ??????
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 13, 2025
Victoria Mboko survives Shibahara 6-4 6-7(8) 7-5 to give Team Canada a 1-0 lead against Team Japan.#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/jlqLmYzax6
The level from these two is INSANE ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/AOaczYiGUx
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 12, 2025
The will to win ??@SabalenkaA defeats a resurgent Kostyuk after a nail bitting second set, 6-1, 7-6(8)!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/tmMBIl1LZg
— wta (@WTA) May 12, 2025
This tennis is in DIFFERENT areas ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/lXxltNsyka
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 15, 2025
FOUGHT HER WAY INTO THE FINAL ??
— wta (@WTA) May 15, 2025
After an over 3 hour battle, @CocoGauff rallies her way into the final in Rome defeating Zheng 7-6(3), 4-6, 7-6!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/ICi4zfL1nI
What a battle between Osaka and Badosa ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/Q16wdaLPbM
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) May 26, 2025
Never stopped fighting ???@paulabadosa | #rolandgarros pic.twitter.com/82jCUfS95I
— wta (@WTA) May 26, 2025
What a match ??
— TNT Sports (@tntsports) May 26, 2025
Paula Badosa overcomes Naomi Osaka in thrilling style ?????#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/D527EzDqVU
The win helped Badosa hold onto her Top 10 ranking as she left Paris while, even with the loss, Osaka rose over .500 in Paris at 8-7 for her career, though she hasn't been past the 2nd Round since 2019.

and she does it AGAIN!@JelenaOstapenk8 defeats Swiatek for a sixth time 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 to advance into the Stuttgart semifinals! #PorscheTennis pic.twitter.com/uNQ60PGMy0
— wta (@WTA) April 19, 2025
Ostapenko after beating Swiatek in Stuttgart
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 19, 2025
“No one else has beaten Iga 6 times in a row. Which statement is more correct.. She hates to play you or you like to play her?”
Jelena: “I think both” ??
pic.twitter.com/ALR9H26iff
Jelena Ostapenko after beating Iga Swiatek in Stuttgart
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 19, 2025
“She’s a great clay court player as well. But you know, I won French Open. So I can say the same thing about myself.” ??
pic.twitter.com/lOKDj8zAAA
— wta (@WTA) April 30, 2025
It's been almost six years since Iga Swiatek was bagelled on clay ??#MMOpen | @WTA pic.twitter.com/7ReIKPK0eV
— TNT Sports (@tntsports) April 30, 2025
you can NEVER count her out ??
— wta (@WTA) April 30, 2025
defending champion @iga_swiatek fights back to defeat Keys 0-6, 6-3, 6-2!#MMOPEN pic.twitter.com/0wGBekTtdQ
And that notion of portending doom was backed up just one day later...
what. a. performance. ??@CocoGauff stuns the defending champ Swiatek, 6-1, 6-1 to reach the FINAL in Madrid! #MMOPEN pic.twitter.com/3OFtNSoeRu
— wta (@WTA) May 1, 2025
No translation needed.#Swiatek #MMOpen pic.twitter.com/AAWMOS3Zw7
— Angers Scolympique (@moneyformonarch) May 1, 2025
And that wasn't the end...
Collins d. Swiatek 6-1 7-5
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 10, 2025
WOW
The 3-time champ is out
Danielle just didn’t let Iga breathe
Thumping backhand winners all over the place
?1st win over Iga since AO 2022
?3rd Rome R16
?16th top 10 win
Danielle went Danimal-mode
One of the fiercest women in sports
?????? pic.twitter.com/TZKk5IfMXP
??Game, set, Collins#IBI25 | @WTA pic.twitter.com/S2vzsCgPcy
— Internazionali BNL d'Italia (@InteBNLdItalia) May 10, 2025
What came next? The trip to Paris could might have proven to be very redemptive and restorative, or truly worrisome. It ended up being a mixed bag, as Swiatek managed to reach the semifinals, having escaped Elena Rybakina in the Round of 16 when she -- finally! -- decided to take a few steps back in the baseline in order to not be gobbled up by the Kazakh's serve and penetrating groundstrokes (quite possibly saving Wim Fissette's coaching position, at least for now?). The tactic worked vs. Aryna Sabalenka in the SF, too, after Swiatek had gotten off to a bad start vs. the world #1. She forced a 3rd set, then... well.
Sabalenka ended that match by winning 19 of the final 21 points and commmitting zero unforced errors in the set, winning 7-6(1)/4-6/6-0.
THE TIGER TAKES OUT THE DEFENDING CHAMP OUT ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/6NAsOwx2Yb
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 5, 2025
The love set lost was the first by Swiatek at Roland Garros since her very first defeat in the tournament, in the 4th Round vs. Simona Halep in 2019. With the loss, the Pole's three-year RG reign came to a close, along with her 26-match slam winning streak in Paris. Her stretch of no appearances in finals has reached a full year, she's 0-5 in semifinals this season, and 0-7 since winning for her fourth RG title last year. Under the watchful eye of coach Wim Fissette since October, Swiatek has fallen from the #1 ranking to #7.


Smiling for a big W ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
Jasmine Paolini advances to the semifinals in dramatic fashion ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/7RBabgVSqe
What a fight from Jasmine ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/T8koigUMIi
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
Elina Svitolina won this match
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 1, 2025
?????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/ZuasIBBxo3
When you comeback from 4-1 down in the second set to win the match, and you can’t believe what just happened ?#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/IjkFSqXqbX
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
What a turnaround, Elina! ??
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
Svitolina saved three match points and stunned our 2024 finalist ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/RzT09qJhvA
Moyuka Magic You don't see too many players pull off a comeback from 1-6, 1-5 down. But, that's exactly what Japan's #1 player did today in Rouen, digging out of a massive deficit to defeat Dove brand ambassador Lois Boisson, 1-6, 7-64, 6-1. Uchijima moves forward to face Danilovic or Fruhvirtova
— Tick Tock Tennis (@ticktocktennis.bsky.social) April 17, 2025 at 10:51 AM
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Moyuka Uchijima defeats Lois Boisson pic.twitter.com/VVUcItgYpc
— JokerNole (@JokerNole69) April 17, 2025
With this match coming in the weeks prior to Roland Garros, Boisson clearly brushed this loss off pretty quickly, I'd say. To say the least.
Madison Keys d. Sofia Kenin 4-6 6-3 7-5 at Roland Garros
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 31, 2025
3 match points saved.
Down 0-3 in the 3rd set.
Insane comeback from Madi.
She remains undefeated in Grand Slams this season.
10 wins, 0 losses.
?1st Roland Garros R16 since 2022
Guts.
?????? pic.twitter.com/NYRqwKr1B0
Comeback complete ??
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 12, 2025
Moyuka Uchijima saves two match points and roars back to defeat Anca Todoni 3-6 7-6(3) 6-2 and clinch the tie for Team Japan.#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/p0kCwviRIJ
Tereza Valentova won this match pic.twitter.com/YvSDlOBMQG
— AnisimovaFan (@FanAnisimova) May 27, 2025
Less than a year after sweeping the RG junior s/d crowns, Valentova had qualified to reach her maiden slam MD. She trailed France's Chloe Paquet 5-2 in the 3rd here, and saw the Pastry get within two points of victory, serving up 5-3, 30/love. But the world #172, who had already won a pair of $75K challengers this season, didn't go down without a fight. Then she didn't go out at all. Valentova rallied to claim the final five games of the match to get her first major match win. And so it begins?
18 years old
— Martin (@PojdBase) May 27, 2025
playing her first main draw at a slam
playing against the home crowd
being down 5:3 and 30:0
but Tereza Valentová prevails! ???? pic.twitter.com/jegrGqwjQU
Answering the challenge ??
— wta (@WTA) May 19, 2025
Beatriz Haddad Maia regroups and saves two match points in order to defeat Tauson, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5.#IS25 pic.twitter.com/U5F3k29LGs
The ultimate fight back ??
— wta (@WTA) April 14, 2025
Anastasia Potapova comes back from a set down to defeat Tauson in an absolute thriller, 2-6, 7-6(8), 6-3!#PorscheTennis pic.twitter.com/9lFOjKijJ3
WHAT A WIN!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) April 27, 2025
Anastasia Potapova saves two match points and defeats Sofia Kenin 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 to reach the fourth round of the Mutua Madrid Open for the first time in her career.
Incredible fightback, winning 4 consecutive points from 4-6 down in the final-set tiebreak. pic.twitter.com/Y7l5v2BRkb
What a comeback!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) May 8, 2025
Anastasia Potapova saves a match point to beat Dayana Yastremska 2-6, 7-6, 6-3 in a tough opening round at the Internazionali BNL D'Italia.
Will face World No.1 Sabalenka next! pic.twitter.com/VDpuwBEX4n
Anastasia Potapova moves on into the second round in Paris. pic.twitter.com/CWyEiYoIDS
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 25, 2025
Big win for Ella Seidel who defeats fellow German Tatjana Maria in her first ever time on the @PorscheTennis center court. pic.twitter.com/XKOyjxqKMq
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) April 16, 2025
No quit, just grit ??
— wta (@WTA) April 16, 2025
Ella Seidel shows her tenacity and defeats Maria in an epic battle 3-6, 7-6(2), 6-4!#PorscheTennis pic.twitter.com/rPq2vvLpa2
Italy's Tyra Caterina Grant in action on Campo Centrale. pic.twitter.com/knTolZvu6T
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 7, 2025
Look at the craftsmenship ?????#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/nHGznp5hcB
— wta (@WTA) May 7, 2025
The 17-year old took the 1st, then led 5-3 in the 3rd, holding two MP on Ruzic's serve before getting the chance to serve it out on her own a game later. Instead, she never won another game.
A gritty display ??
— wta (@WTA) May 7, 2025
Antonia Ruzic saves two match points in order to defeat Grant under the lights in her Rome debut, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/iiFyeo4ntc

Sara Errani is retiring from singles
— HareshRamchandani (@R1979Harry) May 21, 2025
“This, 99 percent, will be my last singles tournament,” the 38-year-old Errani told @BenRothenberg after her comeback win over Jule Niemeier at #RolandGarros yesterdayhttps://t.co/iIcsWbL5xV
Friends will be Friends
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 22, 2025
Jasmine Paolini cheers on doubles partner Sara Errani during her final singles match at Roland Garros. pic.twitter.com/U30Xymsrxc
Sara Errani left this heartfelt message on Instagram following her last career singles match pic.twitter.com/CGyUcy6ZTW
— Mario Boccardi (@boccardi_marioo) May 23, 2025
Sara Errani's singles career comes to a close, will still be playing doubles, and is very successful still.
— Tennis Updates (@TennisUpdates25) May 22, 2025
• Career High of #5
• 9 WTA Titles
• 2012 Roland Garros Final
• 690-516 Record at All Levels, per WTA website
• 13 Top 10 Wins
• 3 Top 5 Wins
?? Jimmie48/WTA Tour pic.twitter.com/SkQIWTpElz
Errani didn't mourn her singles career for long, as she didn't lose a match the rest of her time in Paris, sweeping the women's doubles *and* mixed doubles titles.


A roar heard all over Paris.
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 2, 2025
Epic three-set win for French wild card Lois Boisson who stunned Jessica Pegula to reach her first-ever Grand Slam quarter-final. pic.twitter.com/KAK67YGr9j
In 2024, Boisson was an athletic Pastry looking to take a bite out of the world on the big stage. With multiple challenger titles and a quickly rising ranking (#152 before Roland Garros), she was set to make her slam MD debut in Paris as a wild card before a knee injury a week before the start of play set her career back nine months and delayed her introduction to the tennis world for a full year. Well, everyone sees her now. Even while #3 seed Pegula seemed to be outplaying her in their Round of 16 match-up, Boisson got off to a decent start in the 1st set. She held an on-serve lead at 3-2, but the #3 seed reeled things back in down the stretch, winning 15 of the final 18 points en route to a 6-3 win. Then, lo and behold, Boisson again held a 3-2 edge in the 2nd, but this time the lead didn't feel so tenuous. The Pastry's hard topspin groundstrokes -- especially her favored inside out forehand -- began to help her take advantage of Pegula's (though-improved) still wanting clay court movement. Boisson began to find some traction in the Bannerette's service games and, with Pegula missing on several first serves, broke to take another 3-2 lead, and even though she gave the break back a game it was still the French player who was clearly gathering some momentum. Boisson put still more pressure on Pegula's long serve in game 7, holding two BP before the U.S. veteran finally held on her third GP to lead 4-3. But Pegula couldn't hold the wild card off two games later, and Boisson got the break that gave her a chance to serve out the set. She did so, at love, winning 6-4. Come the 3rd set, with the late-arriving Chatrier fans finally in their seats to offer her the sort of support that a French player is expected to receive in Paris, Boisson was starting to believe that the match might not just turn out to be an exercise in gaining experience for the future. She broke Pegula to open the set, and held to lead 2-0, running her winning streak to five consecutive games. Pegula got the set back on serve, but the two were still knotted at 4-4 later in the set. The big tests were about to come, for both women. In the ninth game, Boisson found an opening on Pegula's serve at 15/30, but the Bannerette would hold three GP for a 5-4 lead before she ever faced a BP. She'd end up seeing Boisson hold four. The French woman ran around a Pegula serve, stepping back into the doubles alley in order to fire off a forehand. But it went long. Pegula's big shots saved the second, while Boisson missed on a nervous-looking angled lob on the third. But on #4, Pegula netted a forehand that put Boisson up 5-4 with the chance to become the first wild card to reach the RG quarterfinals since Mary Pierce (by then just two years removed from being the women's champ in Paris) in 2002. Boisson quickly went up 30/love, but two points later DF'd to level the game at 30-all. This time, after playing a bit too tentatively, it'd be Boisson who'd be tasked with saving four BP. She got lucky on the first, with a successful drop shot off a framed mishit, then found her groove with a perfect lob over Pegula on the second. A forehand winner denied the third, then Pegula pushed her reply to a drop shot wide on #4. With the dream suddenly coming close to being true, Boisson directed a high volley drop shot into the forecourt, and Pegula couldn't scramble and slide across the terre battue well enough to pull off a winner, instead firing her shot into the net to give Boisson a MP. A forehand winner down the line completed the year-long circle for Boisson, as she went from disappointed (and injured) would-be wild card to the most successful French player at this year's Roland Garros, reaching the QF in her maiden slam MD with a 3-6/6-4/6-4 win over the world #3 on the biggest court at her dream event.
Elation and packing up & going home are just mere meters seperated on a tennis court. pic.twitter.com/bpyg2AUxF7
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 2, 2025
What a moment for French wild card Lois Boisson who beat Pegula and qualified for the quarter-finals, and is today’s Extraordinary Moments with @HaierOfficial#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/LQrggWpPyN
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 2, 2025
La vie est belle ?????#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/jK5PstqgBA
— wta (@WTA) June 2, 2025
At #361, Boisson became the lowest-ranked woman to reach a major QF since 2017, then followed up with a QF win over #6 Mirra Andreeva to become the lowest-ranked slam semifinalist (not counting a few unranked former champions on the comeback path) in four decades.
6 GAMES IN A ROW TO REACH THE SEMI-FINALS FOR LOIS BOISSON ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/MLPBookvlt
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
LOIS BOISSON.
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
REMEMBER THE NAME.#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/brvgyZydRe
Cold. ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/TAxZ6cBFNx
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
UNBE-LI-VABLE ??
— ITF (@ITFTennis) May 11, 2024
Xiaohui Li defeats Diede de Groot 6-3 6-2 and ENDS her 145 match win streak at the World Team Cup pic.twitter.com/d0AdOtkAgw
This year at RG, Li was at it again, this time ending de Groot's 52-match winning streak in slam play via a very similar scoreline in this year's RG opener for both women.
De Groot's first loss at Roland-Garros since 2020, what a record set by Diede and what a performance by Xiaohui ??#RolandGarros https://t.co/EFiRyuXXwX pic.twitter.com/XAus70eU8y
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 3, 2025
De Groot's exit came as both a surprise and, well, not-THAT-much of one. Of course, for quite a few years it's been a surprise *any* time she loses, but she's still in the very early stages of her comeback from hip surgery, *and* Li has been the breakout player amongst the rollers in 2025, rising to #4 in the rankings and with this having posted wins over the #1 (Yui Kamiji), #2 (Aniek Van Koot) and #3-ranked (de Groot) players in the WC rankings. Still, de Groot had been 7-0 in limited action in the first few weeks of her return, and had beaten Li in a singles final two weeks earlier in three sets. De Groot still has a 4-2 career edge vs. Li in their head-to-head, but the 25-year old from China has made the very most of her two (streak-ending) victories over the active wheelchair legend. De Groot had been crowned champion at the last fifteen slam singles events she'd played, hadn't lost in a major since the 2020 Roland Garros (SF-Momoko Ohtani) and hadn't had a one-and-out slam journey since AO20 (a loss to Zhu Zhenzhen). De Groot had at least reached the final in 26 of her last 28 majors (winning 23), and at 26 of 30 during her career.
?1ÈRE VICTOIRE WTA TOUR TABLEAU PRINCIPAL POUR RAKOTOMANGA RAJAONAH ????
— ???????????? ?? ?????????? ?? ???????? (@TennisRoyalNews) April 14, 2025
La joueuse de 19 ans (291) bat Lucia BRONZETTI (58 WTA) [6-2,6-3] à ROUEN.
Elle vainc une joueuse du top 100 dès sa première tentative.
Une Wild-Card à Roland Garros cette année ??? pic.twitter.com/OsdDSmiJAt pic.twitter.com/d22l6jJRr9
Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah
— 40 Love To Deuce (@40Lovetodeuce) April 14, 2025
Rouen 25
In her WTA debut, TRR went through Bronzetti like a knife through butter.
Maybe even more impressive, she re braided her hair to perfection in less than 30 seconds at a break. Call me impressed! #wta #tennis #Rouen #porschetennis pic.twitter.com/ijDgPzGFf3
What a moment ?? ????
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 12, 2025
Celine Naef claims a first #BJKCup win for Switzerland over Ukraine's Marta Kostyuk ??
Her 6-4 7-6(1) victory gives Switzerland a 1-0 lead in the tie and keeps their hopes alive! pic.twitter.com/Btug840r3A
Qualifier Sara Bejlek defeats Marta Kostyuk 6-3, 6-1 to reach the second round of a Grand Slam for the first time in her career.
— edgeAI (@edgeAIapp) May 25, 2025
She was 0-5 in GS main draws. Saved 1 MP vs Shibahara in R2 of qualifying.
1st big upset on the women’s side.
What a match from the 19yo Czech ?? pic.twitter.com/DHCq9lhnTc
Kostyuk reached the Round of 16 in Paris back in 2021, but this one-and-done dropped her record to 1-4 in the years since.

Your 2025 Roland Garros champion: @CocoGauff pic.twitter.com/n9WJP2gXL4
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 7, 2025
I hadn't seen that wonderful photo of Bejlek! I'm guessing she has regular yoga practice. :)
ReplyDeleteAbout that...
ReplyDeleteI never said anything about that photo during RG because I only saw a very tiny shot of it included amongst others early on in the event and never gave it a second thought, then about mid-way through RG saw that story on the site talking about it "going viral" or something about all the attention it has supposedly gotten. And, I thought, I'd barely seen anything about it... and they hadn't even really highlighted it in RG social media, either.
It *is* a great photo, though. ;)