By Tumaini Carayol in Paris • June 8, 2026 • Sport

Dramatic French Open cannot disguise how top men’s players failed to seize golden opportunity
Dramatic French Open cannot disguise how top men’s players failed to seize golden opportunity

Zverev took his chance but a lack of top 10 challengers in Paris raises more questions about the strength in depth below Alcaraz and Sinner

Félix Auger-Aliassime has long been one of the more measured and reflective players on the ATP Tour. He is desperate to achieve his potential, but the Canadian also understands that improvement is often a long process and remaining patient is essential. That is what made his reaction to defeat at the French Open so striking. As the fourth seed reeled from his desperate quarter‑final loss against Flavio Cobolli, fully conscious of the fact that he had missed a great opportunity, Auger‑Aliassime was as distraught in public after a defeat as he has ever been. His patience had run out. “I can’t complain with my life, but I’m in a place right now with my career that it’s tough,” he said. “I’m destroyed a little bit. “I usually handle losses pretty well. My whole career, I was going back to training with optimism and positivity. Now I feel as if I’m not the player I want to be, so today is a difficult day.” Paris this year played host to one of the most dramatic men’s grand slam tournaments in recent history, with the second seed, Alexander Zverev, emerging from the chaos to finally win his first major title. In the aftermath, quite a few other leading players would be smart to reflect on how badly they failed to give themselves a chance to compete alongside the German for the title. Before Roland Garros, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner had shared nine consecutive grand slam titles between them, leading many to question the strength of the challengers behind. Those questions will now only increase. Alcaraz, the defending champion, was absent because of injury and Sinner lost in round two, but most of the top players were nowhere to be seen. Zverev faced one top‑20 opponent, Cobolli (the world No 14) in the final, in his seven matches. It is nearly impossible to exaggerate the madness that unfolded elsewhere. Sinner had entered the tournament as the strongest favourite this century (other than Rafael Nadal in 2009) after rolling through victorious in Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome. Instead, he led Juan Manuel Cerúndolo 6-3, 6-2, 5-1 before crumbling physically and losing 18 of the next 20 games. Sinner’s defeat transformed the draw, but four of the top 12 – Daniil Medvedev, Taylor Fritz, Alexander Bublik and Jiri Lehecka – were already out. Ben Shelton, the fifth seed, was out by the end of the day. The next day, the 39-year-old Novak Djokovic led the 19-year-old Brazilian João Fonseca by two sets before being outgunned in five dramatic sets. This was certainly a good tournament for youngsters, with the 20-year-old Jakub Mensik, the 19-year-old Rafa Jodar and Fonseca all enjoying breakthroughs, even if they were not ready for more. The rest of the tournament was defined by tension as those remaining tried to seize the opportunity of a lifetime. It is hard to imagine there will be a day such as Saturday 30 May again, where nearly every match in the top half vacated by Sinner was so tight. Five of the eight contests went to five sets, including a ridiculous 5hr 58min win for Cerúndolo over Martin Landaluce, the longest five‑set match with a match tie‑break. After Matteo Berrettini retired from his quarter-final match with Matteo Arnaldi, Arnaldi withdrew before his scheduled semi-final against Cobolli because of a virus. These men were mentally and physically destroyed. One of the bleakest aspects was the sheer number who did not make it to the start line and so many of the absentees being contemporaries of Alcaraz and Sinner, players who could have taken the tournament by storm. On the eve of the event, the news that the 21-year-old Frenchman Arthur Fils would be unable to compete here because of a hip injury was a massive blow. He had been one of the best performers in the previous few months, a champion in Barcelona and semi‑finalist in Miami and Madrid. It was deeply disappointing that he did not have the opportunity to see how he would have handled the pressure. Likewise, the 24-year-old Lorenzo Musetti reached the semi‑final or final of all the big clay‑court tournaments last year and would have been a contender if not for the fact that, since his retirement in the semi‑final here last year, he has been injured frequently. This could have similarly been a huge opportunity for 24-year-old Jack Draper, but he has been unable to stay healthy. Holger Rune, 23, is still sidelined because of the torn achilles tendon he sustained last year. The timeline of Alcaraz’s recovery from his right wrist injury remains uncertain. Between so many injuries, some competitors being in poor form and others not quite having the ability to push on, men’s tennis is in a curious position at the end of the second grand slam tournament of the year and it seems the terms of engagement will be similar at Wimbledon at the end of the month. Assuming there are no lasting physical effects from his Paris meltdown, Sinner, the defending champion, will probably begin as the heavy favourite. If he falters again, though, anything is possible.

Source: The Guardian


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