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Roland Garros Drama and Results

Tuesday, May 26, 2026
5 min read
Roland Garros Drama and Results

Iga Swiatek just cruised into the second round of Roland Garros on Monday. Dominant, really. The Paris clay was already seeing some heavy emotional goodbyes, too. Stan Wawrinka and Gael Monfils were saying their final goodbyes.

She played her first Grand Slam since teaming up with Francisco Roig. And she absolutely dismantled the Australian teenager, Emerson Jones. Six-one, six-two. All in one hour.

The four-time French Open champion looked sharp right from the start. She’s pushing hard now. Trying to grab that title again. She’s done it three times already, between 2022 and 2024.

“I’m really happy with the way I played,” she said. “It was solid, from the beginning to the end. I technically knew how to play.”

Next up for her? Czech player Sara Bejlek.

Then there was Elena Rybakina. She was equally clinical in that Paris heat. Dispatching Veronika Erjavec, six-two, six-two. On Court Philippe Chatrier.

It was brutally hot. 32 deGrees Celsius. The Australian Open champion just needed it to be over. She was relieved to keep the outing short.

“It’s tough conditions,” Rybakina mentioned. “But I’m happy things worked. Looking forward to the next match.”

She now faces Yuliia Starodubtseva from Ukraine.

But drama wasn't confined to the winners. Elsewhere, there was real fighting. Elina Svitolina battled something serious. A breakdown in the deciding set. She clawed her way back to beat Anna Bondar. Three-six, six-one, seven-six (10/3).

The Ukrainian kept her perfect first-round record. Thirteen wins from thirteen appearances. That felt important.

Jasmine Paolini, a former finalist, just advanced in straight sets. Meanwhile, Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen got hit with a shock first-round exit. Lost to Maja Chwalinska from Poland.

The day itself felt like an end. An end to some things.

Wawrinka, playing what might be his last Roland Garros before hanging up his racquet later this year, lost to Dutch lucky loser Jesper de Jong. Four sets. It was a loss. But it was a moment. The 2015 champion got a real tribute after that match. Federer, Nadal, Djokovic—they all sent video messages.

“Thanks to all your support,” Wawrinka told the crowd. “I wanted to go on as long as possible. To 41 years of age. To continue living moments like this.”

Monfils’ farewell was equally emotional. The French veteran put on a stirring comeback from being down two sets. Then he faded in the decider against fellow Frenchman Hugo Gaston. A tough exit, but a fight.

Casper Ruud, on the other side, just survived a brutal five-set battle. The heat was relentless. But American fifth seed Ben Shelton just progressed comfortably.

All this chaos, all these results. It just keeps moving. The air is thick with the feeling of these big moments, you know? The pressure, the wins, the losses. It’s just happening.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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