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Reigning major champions make their move at Roland Garros

  • Matt Trollope

For the first time in a long time, women’s tennis has become top-heavy at Roland Garros.

This is a tournament that produced, at the time, surprise champions like 47th-ranked Jelena Ostapenko, and Iga Swiatek, who triumphed three years later as world No.54. Barbora Krejcikova was also an unseeded champion in 2021.

It has featured unseeded finalists like Marketa Vondrousova (2019) and Karolina Muchova (2023). In 2020, qualifier Nadia Podoroska made the semifinals, while fellow qualifier Martina Trevisan was a quarterfinalist. Amanda Anisimova (2019) and Tamara Zidansek (2021) were semifinalists despite being ranked outside the top 50.

It has been open and unpredictable – but not in 2024.

For the first time since 2013, all top-four seeds have advanced to the second week in Paris.

And on Sunday, reigning major champions made a statement.

Defending Roland Garros champion Swiatek was ruthless in a 40-minute demolition of Anastasia Potapova, winning 6-0 6-0 on Court Philippe Chatrier.

At the same time on Court Suzanne Lenglen, last year’s Wimbledon winner Vondrousova rebounded from a slow start to cruise past qualifier Olga Danilovic.

Coco Gauff, the 2023 US Open champion, followed Swiatek onto Chatrier and completed a businesslike 6-1 6-2 victory over Elisabetta Cocciaretto.

“Usually if you're after (Swiatek), you know it's probably going to be a quick match,” Gauff said. “I definitely wasn't expecting 40 minutes … (but) it's one of those things that you kind of plan for the fastest-case scenario.”

READ MORE: Gauff an improving triple-surface threat, says Gilbert

Should Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka beat Emma Navarro to join them in the quarterfinals, it would be the first time four reigning Grand Slam winners have advanced to the last eight of the same women’s Slam since the 2012 US Open.

Back then, it was Sam Stosur, Victoria Azarenka, Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams appearing in the quarters in New York.

That tournament also represents the last time four reigning women’s major champions reached the last 16 at the same Slam, until Roland Garros this year.

What’s more, when these players progress this far, they ultimately begin facing one another in matches of extra gravitas.

This will be the case when Swiatek and Vondrousova battle for a place in the semifinals.

RELATED: Swiatek seeking to emulate Roland Garros greats

“We played a couple matches on the hard courts. But obviously she's feeling great here. She won 6-Love, 6-Love today. So I expect a tough match,” said Vondrousova, who trails the head-to-head series 0-3.

“But yeah, now I'm in position. I have nothing to lose. So I'm just going to go and try to enjoy the match and just try to maybe play a good match.”

The winner of that match could then meet Gauff, should the American beat Ons Jabeur in the other quarterfinal of the top half of the draw.

 

GRAND SLAM WOMEN’S MATCHES 
BETWEEN REIGNING MAJOR CHAMPIONS*

Year

Event

Match

Round

Winner

2016

Wimbledon

S.Williams v Kerber

F

S.Williams

2023

Australian Open

Swiatek v Rybakina

4R

Rybakina

2024

Australian Open

Sabalenka v Gauff

SF

Sabalenka

2024

Roland Garros

Swiatek v Vondrousova

QF

?

*Reigning major champions in a traditional 12-month cycle; Swiatek played Halep at AO 2021 when Halep had won the most recent Wimbledon 18 months earlier in 2019 (no Wimbledon in 2020)

 

Such matches have not been a common occurrence at Grand Slam tournaments until this era of consistency in the women’s game.

Prior to 2023, you had to go back to 2016 – the Wimbledon final between Serena Williams and Angelique Kerber – to find a women’s match featuring two reigning major champions from the previous 12 months.

Meanwhile, Jabeur’s quarterfinal run means that in the top half of the draw, all four quarterfinal slots have been filled by top-eight seeds.

The last time this happened in one half of the women’s draw at Roland Garros was 17 years ago.

RELATED: The five women who rose above the others

Jabeur is still seeking a first Grand Slam title – she is a three-time finalist – but another Grand Slam champion still alive in Paris is 2022 Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina.

Should she and Sabalenka win on Monday, it would be the first time since Australian Open 2013 that five former Grand Slam champions featured in the quarterfinal line-up at the same Slam.

FORMER MAJOR CHAMPIONS 
INTO AO 2013 WOMEN’S QFs

Player

Final result

Victoria Azarenka

Champion

Li Na

Final

Maria Sharapova

Semifinal

Serena Williams

Quarterfinal

Svetlana Kuznetsova

Quarterfinal

 

This has not happened at Roland Garros since 2006, when Venus Williams, Svetlana Kuznetsova, Justine Henin, Martina Hingis and Kim Clijsters all progressed to the last eight.