French Open 2026: Rublev and Swiatek win, Djokovic and Muchova in action on day six – live

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On Chatrier, Andreeva and Bouzkova are level at 3-3, but Andreeva is starting to play, a tremendous backhand taking her to deuce on return, and though she nets in the next point, prior to it she was dictating. And it’s that increased aggression which will give her a chance of winning majors – her defensive work is supreme, but without a big weapon, she needs to find other ways of finishing points, and conviction might just be the way.

What I really like about Muchova is the intelligence of her play – she has power, but varies spin, speed and angles better than almost everyone. Of course, as I type, she’s broken for 0-2; let’s see how she handles that.

We’re under way on Lenglen, where Teichmann has taken the first game against Muchova. Muchova is a brilliant player whose career has been hampered by injuries, but her grand slam record tells us just how good she is – she’s made the final of this competition, losing to Swiatek in three tight sets, the semis of the two hard-court majors, and the last eight at Wimbledon. It’s been a couple of years since the most recent of all those, but she lost a three-setter to Gauff in Melbourne, won in Qatar, lost to Gauff in the Miami semi, beat Gauff in Stuttgart – and Svitolina – then lost the final to Rybakina. She might just be ready for this.

Michelsen responds really well when down break point, but the feeling persists that the match is on Jodar’s racket: he’s got bigger power, but also a terrific understanding of what a rally requires. He leads 7-6 0-1.

It’s getting close on 14, Tirante retrieving a set to trail Carreno Busta 6-7 5-7 6-3 2-12, while on Chatrier we’re on serve, Bouzkova leading Andreeva 2-1.

Back with the dubs, longtime readers will know that Calv Betton, a great friend of the blog and whose insights are the best bit of it, coaches Henry Patten. He and Harri Heliovaara are currently on court against Mattia Bellucci and Fábián Marozsán; they lead 5-1 in the first set.

On Mathieu, they’re playing a breaker and, from 0-2 down, Jodar rips through seven points on the spin to lead Michelsen 7-6. He’s looking very good indeed, his ability to change tempo and intensity a rare one; he’s seeded to meet Zverev in the last eight and though there’s plenty of work for both to do before then, it’d be a tremendous tussle.

Next on Lenglen: Jil Teichmann v Karolína Muchová.

I really like Rublev – he seems like such a good lad and I’m told he is. What he said about charisma is really interesting, because a s a bloke, he has it, but competitively, he doesn’t quite have the belief in himself, which is a major reasons he struggles against the best in the biggest tournament. Juvenile though this sounds, if he can introduce a bit of swagger to proceedings, he’ll be a much better player.

Rublev says he played a tough player who is dangerous and has good shots; he thinks they played good rallies at good speed, and he’s happy to have won.

“How do you manage to stay calm?” Fabrice Santoro wonders; “I’m not a good person to ask,” Rublev responds. “So what’s going on in your head?” comes back at him; “You know, Looney Tunes, the Tasmanian Devil? The one that’s crazy” is the answer.

Working with Marat Safin, now coaching him, is something unique and special, he’s grateful and it’s been amazing to work with him. The thing Safin is trying to bring to his game is “charisma” but also to see the court, how to move the opponent and when to step in, not just hitting the ball.

Andrey Rublev (11) beats Nuno Borges 7-5 7-6(2) 7-6(2)

An excellent performance from Rublev, who served well when he needs to and found winners when he needed them. Next for him comes Mensik or De Minaur, and like every man left in the draw, he’ll be wondering if this might be his time.

Andrey Rublev celebrates winning his third round match against Nuno Borges.
Andrey Rublev celebrates winning his third round match against Nuno Borges. Photograph: Stéphane Mahé/Reuters

And that might be that, a backhand swatted cross as Borges chugs from corner to corner makes it 5-2 Rublev, a booming ace out wide follows, and he now has four match points.

Borges secures his hold, so here comes our second breaker in a row, and he’s immediately down a mini-break, Rublev dashing in to whip a winner down the line by way of consolidation.

Visiting on Lenglen, Borges is serving to stay in the match at 5-7 6-7 5-6 while, on Mathieu, Jodar and Michelsen have swapped breaks once more, the Spaniard just holding to lead 5-4.

I really don’t have a clue what’s going to happen in week two of the women’s competition. Five to ten years ago, it was the least predictable sport in the world because no one was all that good so anyone could win any tournament; now, it’s the least predictable sport in the world because so many players are so damn brilliant.

Next on Chatrier: Mirra Andreeva (8) v Marie Bouzkova (27).

Swiatek says sometimes you have to be patient as it’s easy to go for a winner and miss, so her forehand top-spin did a lot today, and she’s also happy with her second serve and general solidity.

Asked about spending time training with Rafael Nadal, she says it was an amazing experience. She didn’t think he’d have time to come to her practises and he gave her some technical tiops, but the main thing to take from him is his approach to the game – it’s not always easy, sometimes the best players struggle, the key is to get over it, work on stuff, and never give up. He had some stories to share and is really open to giving advice, which she really appreciates.

This was the first time two Polish players have met at Roland Garros in the open eara – she hoes to see the fans again in the next days.

Iga Swiatek (3) beats Magda Linette 6-4 6-4

Swiatek is so good at improving through the rounds, and that was the best she’s played this week. But her next match, against Kostyuk, will offer a very different challenge – an elite athlete, with big power, and lots of confidence. I can’t wait.

Iga Swiatek fires off a serve during her straight sets victory over Magda Linette.
Iga Swiatek fires off a serve during her straight sets victory over Magda Linette. Photograph: Teresa Suárez/EPA

And very quickly, it’s 6-4 5-4 40-0…

On more than a few occasions, Linette has done the hard work then missed with her winner, and a forehand swiped down the line but wide, means that at 30-all, she’s two points away from defeat. But she then plays a really good rally for 40-30, then Swiatek goes long on the backhand, meaning she must serve for the match after change of ends.

Of course, as I type, Jodar serves three doubles in the process of surrendering his break, so he now leads 3-2 while, on Lenglen, Borges has the umpire down so he can chunter about a ball he thinks is out and on Chatrier, Linette is serving at 4-6 3-5 to stay in the mach.

Jodar breaks Michelsen for 3-1, and there’s a really good composure about him – he knows he’s meant to be here. Unlike the lads who try taking four of the 11 spare seats in his box – his old fella hoofs them out in short order, but biggup for trying.

Carreno Busta now leads Tirante 7-6 7-5; Rublev leads Borges 2-0 3-2; Linette retrieves one break to trail Swiatek 4-6 3-4.

Linette made it close for a bit, but Swiatek breaks her again to lead 6-4 4-1, and this is almost over. I can’t wait to see her match with Kostyuk, though, because she’ll need all her copious wiles to handle the power and point-construction that awaits her.

On Mathieu, Jodar and Michelsen are ready to go, telly showing us that the former only has one man in his box. I guess he’s only 19 and his mates are busy – his rise has been remarkable. At the start of the year, he was ranked 168, but a win in Marrakesh, followed by a semi in Barca and quarter in Madrid, means he came to Paris seeded in only his second slam.

And if that isn’t enough, Jannik Sinner, who beat him in Madrid, is a fan:

double quotation mark“He’s already a very solid player, and I think he has shown why. He’s playing very, very high-quality tennis. Everyone is improving, you know, so you need always to be in the present moment. That’s also one of the reasons why I went to watch him, you know, him and Joao Fonseca. I like to watch because I know that they are going to be potentially the future opponents most of the time.”

Borges has netted a lot today, especially on backhand, and that’s exactly what he does when up break point in the opening game of set three; from there, Rublev closes out the game to lead 7-5 7-6 1-0. On Chatrier, meanwhile, Swiatek leads Linette 6-4 3-1.

In the men’s dubs, Julian Cash & Lloyd Glasspool, the Wimbledon champs, have been knocked out by the Czech pair, Pavlasek and Rikl; Carreno Bustas leads Tirante 7-6 5-5; and Swiatek leads Linette 6-4 2-1 with a break.

Xiy Wang beats Yuliia Starodubtseva 6-3 7-5

The qualifier beats the conqueror of the no 2 seed. Next for her: Sierra or Cirstea.

Xiyu Wang powers a backhand to Yuliia Starodubtseva during her straight sets victory.
Xiyu Wang powers a backhand to Yuliia Starodubtseva during her straight sets victory. Photograph: Matthew Stockman/Getty Images

Back with Rublev, as we suspected, Boeges just isn’t quite good enough to stick with him. He breezes through a 7-2 breaker to lead 7-5 7-6, and I can’t see how he loses from here.

Kostyuk, into the last 1 for the first time since 2021, says it means a lot. She’s had really bad results in Paris and her opponents this year were really tricky, “So I couldn’t rush, I had to create the points, not something I love to do.”

Next, she thanks the crowd for their support in al her matches so far then, asked abot the 15-minute game which secured the first set, she says she started well then began rushing, losing her advantage, but she felt like she was the better player and having lost a set last round from 5-4 0-40 that extended her time on court, she really wanted to get it done. She didn’t feel the heat so much but it’s incredibly humid today and she woke up today not feeling good, the heat taking its toll on everyone, but she knows from Sunday the weather changes.

Asked about her form on clay, she says she’s gone back to “Little Me”. She used to play well on clay, then she decided she had to to grow up and do things differently, but now she’s rediscovering the joy of creating the points, changing tempo and running around a lot, something she loves to do that isn’t difficult for her.

What a great, enlightening and refreshing interview that was. I think this blog has a new favourite to add to Maddison Keys and Karolína Muchová.

Lovely behaviour from Rublev, who makes 40-0 then secures his breaker with a leaping, wrong-footing backhand smash, sending it down the line from on the line, rather than cross as anticipated. Can Borges find the quality to reach seven points first?

Next on Mathieu: Alex Michelsen v Rafael Jodar (27).

Talking of whom, though Linette played some really good stuff in set one, Swiatek has just served it out to lead 6-4. On Lenglen, an impressive hold for Borges means Rublev must now hold for a second-set breaker at 7-5 5-6.

Marta Kostyuk (15) beats Viktorija Golubic 6-4 6-3

An impressive win, sealed with a glorious flat backhand down the line, over a tricky opponent. Kostyuk, though, was too good, and should she meet Swiatek not Linette next, don’t be surprised if she wins.

Marta Kostyuk bangs out a backhand return during her straight sets victory over Viktorija Golubic.
Marta Kostyuk bangs out a backhand return during her straight sets victory over Viktorija Golubic. Photograph: Loic Baratoux/Zuma Press/Shutterstock

I’ve enjoyed Kostyuk’s demeanour so far this week – she has a big game, which necessarily means errors, but hasn’t got down on herself when things haven’t gone to plan and, as I type, she reaches 40-15 and two match points.

Golubic holds, forcing Kostyuk to serve for the match at 6-4 5-3; Swiatek breaks Linette and is now serving for the first set at 5-4.

Talking of whom, at 40-30, Kostyuk chucks in an underarm serve, secures the hold, and at 5-2 she’s a game away. When Michael Chang tried it, too exhausted to do anything else, I don’t think he anticipated its eventual emergence as a tactic.

Even now, it’s remarkable that he won the title. At the time, I wasn’t happy – Stefan Edberg, who he beat in the final, was my favourite because, I can now see, his calm and composure was the opposite of 10-year-old me. But looking back, how great that he got it done.

Down break point again, Rublev’s forehand gets him out of trouble, then a vicious top-spinner seizes advantage and an inside-out backhand secures the hold. As with Kostyuk, it’s clear the match is on his racket: he can hit a level of which his opponent cannot dream, and if he’s anywhere close to it, it doesn’t matter what happens on the other side of the net.

Out on 14, Carreno Busta has taken the first set against Tirante and now leads 3-0 in set two; Wang leads Starodubtseva 6-3 but trails 2-4 in the second; Kostyuk leads Golubic 6-4 4-1, looking good; and Linette has just broken Swiatek back for 3-3 in the first.

I very much enjoyed this:

It’s so interesting to hear Murray talk about practise – I remember Kevin Pietersen saying the same to me, first about cricket but also about golf. The mental capacity to enjoy doing the same things, over and over again, and to work out what to do to get better, is just as much a talent as being good at them.

In winning that long game to take the first set, Kostyuk might just’ve broken the back of this match; she now leads 2-0 in the second, and I’m already buzzing at the thought of a fourth-round encounter with Swiatek. Back on Lenglen, Rublev is back in business, breaking Borges to lead 7-5 2-3, and it feels like he’ll do whatever is asked of him to win this match; I don’t think Borges, crafty though he is, can hit consistently enough to beat him.

Now then. Swiatek is brilliant at coaxing herself through the rounds, but she’ll not be happy to be broken immediately, Linette leading 2-0 … er, make that 2-1, the advantage immediately confiscated. Meantime, Rublev has also been broken, the serving that settled set one forsaking him in two, and that, really is the difference; he hammers his racket into the clay, which is better than doing so into himself, and he leads 7-5 1-3.

Borges, who’ll feel unlucky to have lost the first set, breaks Rublev immediately for 5-7 2-0, while Linette holds in game one of her clash with Swiatek.

Nuno Borges dashes across court to make a forehand return to Andrey Rublev.
Nuno Borges dashes across court to make a forehand return to Andrey Rublev. Photograph: Stéphane Mahé/Reuters

Better work at the net from Kostyuk restores deuce as the game ticks towards 13 minutes, then she nails a return to raise her fourth set point … only to overhit backhand. If she loses this, I’d not be surprised to see her broken next up because the emotional dump of disappointment might well be distracting. But a backhand winner down the line gives her yet another opportunity to forge in front and this time, Golubic swats wide. Kostyuk, who won both Rouen and Madrid, so hasn’t lost for 13 matches, leads 6-4.

Golubic nets a mid-court forehand when up advantage while, elsewhere, Tirente leads Carreno Busta 6-5 – I’m turning that match off now to get on Swiatek v Linette – and Wang is up on Starodubtseva 6-3 1-0, with a break.

On Mathieu, Kostyuk leads Golubic 5-4 and, at deuce, a terrific return raises a second set point. And she’s well in the rally, until Golubic finds a lovely angle to attack the sideline, cleaning up with an overhead … but when she makes advantage, Kostyuk opens shoulders to annihilate a inside-out forehand cross-court, indulging herself by saluting the crowd … only to make a mess of her next volley, this time opting not to ask what anyone else thinks. She does, though, make advantage again, the power differential clear to see … only to drag a backhand wide when nicely placed; back to deuce we go while, on Lenglen, Rublev returns after disappearing between sets.

Borges dominates the first rally of the game only to tamely waft a volley long. He does, though, make 15-30 … but a really good, flat, squash-shotted forehand from Rublev restores parity and another netted backhand offers him set point, neither player able to sustain their best play. So we wind up at deuce, then an ace and a service winner, fired out wide from the advantage court – the hardest to hit – snatch the set, the emphatic nature of its climax out of keeping with what went before. But Rublev leads 7-5, and Borges will have to play seriously well if he maintains the same standard on first delivery.

A forehand return, coaxed down the line, gives Rublev 0-15 and a backhand of similar quality means that at 0-30, he’s in business. And though Borges levels, a netted backhand means he must face a break point … and another netted backhand donates the breakthrough. At 6-5, Rublev will shortly serve for a first set in which he’s been second-best.

Rublev raises two break points but Borges saves them well, allowing his impetuous opponent to overhit; he leads 5-4 in the first. Similarly, Golubic also burns a break point by going long, but already it’s clear that if Kostyuk plays well, she wins whatever her opponent does; the question is whether she can hit consistently enough, because she’s by far the more powerful and talented player. She holds for 4-3, while Rublev is struggling, Borges outmanoeuvring him around the court, but his serve gets him out of trouble at 0-30, to level at 5-5.

On Lenglen, Borges and Rublev are level at 4-4; Golubic has just been broken back to love by Kostyuk for 3-3, this the first time she’s lost this many games in a set at this tournament; Tirante, the fastest server in the world, leads Carreno Busta 3-2 on serve; and Starodubtseva, conqueror of Rybakina, leads Wang 3-2 with a break.

Preamble

Salut à tous et bienvenue à Roland-Garros 2026 – sixième jour!

Round three, not something that gets us going in theory, but in practice? Oh là là! For round three is when our seeds – or those who’ve vanquished seeds – meet, and we’ve got a frankly wild selection of those contests awaiting us today. Can we beat yesterday’s wildness? Perhaps not, but we’re going to try.

We open with Marta Kostyuk, a talent in the process of realisation but one that, in the past, might’ve been stymied by the wiles of a veteran such as Viktorija Golubic. Her run to the final in Madrid, though, suggests she’s beyond that now … but is she?

Also in action early is Andrey Rublev, whose second-round ruckus with Ugo Cabello was one of the matches of the week so far. He should have enough to get by Nuno Borges, but whether he’s enough to get by himself always remains to be seen.

On Chatrier, meanwhile, we’ve a Polish derby as Iga Swiatek, our four-time champion, faces Magda Linette, and from there, it’s madness all the way. Alex Michelsen’s match with Rafael Jodar offers us a taste of the future, while the fantastic Karolína Muchová, one of the best players yet to win a slam, takes her brand of power and creativity to Jil Teichmann, and Mirra Andreeva resumes her quest for a major with a tricky tussle against Marie Bouzkova.

Were that all, it’d be enough – but it’s not even close. Following on later, we’ve Alex de Minaur v Jakub Mensik, Karen Khachanov v Jesper de Jong, Elina Svitolina v Tamara Korpatsch, Casper Ruud v Tommy Paul, and the undoubted match of the day: João Fonseca, a superstar in the making, versus Novak Djokovic, whose evil genius has somehow removed the two players standing between him and an impossible, possible, 25th grand slam title.

Chauette! On y va!

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