Mirra Andreeva seals the title, 6–3, 6–2.
Mirra Andreeva seals the title, 6–3, 6–2.
She makes the final push look ruthless, races to 0–15, then 0–30, piling pressure on Chwalińska’s serve. The net cord finally gives way under the weight of it all, handing over three championship points.
On the second chance, Andreeva steps in at the net and finishes it off in style, calm, clinical, and completely in control.
A first Grand Slam crown for the 19-year-old, and it feels like just the beginning. The post-match scenes say it all: she’s in the stands, embracing Martinez after a breakthrough run that’s been years in the making.
A champion is born in Paris, and the tour has been put on notice.
Chwalinska edges a small opening.
At 3–6, 2–5, Andreeva hands over another unforced error, and the qualifier does just enough to chip away at the lead. Still a mountain to climb, but she’s hanging on, trying to squeeze every bit of pressure she can out of these late stages of the set.
Chwalińska can’t find the break back.
Andreeva stands tall on deuce, stretches the rally, drags her side to side, then finishes it off with a clean winner. No panic, no panic swings, just control when it mattered most.
She rattles off five straight points to wrap up a tight hold. Another game, another statement from the 19-year-old, that first Grand Slam title is starting to feel very real now.
So close to the early break again for Andreeva!
She goes after the line with intent, but the ball drifts just an inch wide, agonising margin. What would’ve been a clean statement start to the set instead brings us back to deuce.
Andreeva is firmly in rhythm now.
She powers through the final stretch of the set, landing another sharp cross-court winner to seal it in just 34 minutes, finishing with her fourth break of serve. Chwalińska had flashes, but Andreeva’s control and timing have taken over the opening frame.
First set to Andreeva, 6–3.
3–3, and Andreeva holds firm again.
She flips the script on Chwalińska’s earlier drop-shot and lob routine, racing ahead to 15–0 by taking control early. A rare net error from Chwalińska pushes it to 30–0, and suddenly she looks a touch unsettled after usually dictating with height and margin.
Andreeva is matching the heavy balls, staying solid on the moon-ball exchanges, then stepping in to finish with a clean winner. Hold secured to 15. Set one stays on serve, but momentum is starting to lean Andreeva’s way.
Andreeva grabs the early break.
From 15-all, she steps in to punish a short ball and moves ahead to 15-30, keeping points short and sharp. A Chwalińska error then gifts her double break point, and the qualifier finally cracks under pressure on the second chance, sending one long into the air.
Break confirmed. Andreeva leads 2–1 in the first set and is dictating the early tempo.
We are underway in the Roland-Garros 2026 women’s singles final as Maja Chwalińska takes on Mirra Andreeva. The Philippe-Chatrier crowd is locked in, every point already feeling heavy with history as both players look to grab control early.
The women’s singles final of the French Open 2026 between Mirra Andreeva and Maja Chwalinska is scheduled for Saturday, June 6, with action set to begin at 6:50 p.m. IST.
In India, the match will be broadcast live on Sony Sports Network, while fans can also catch the live stream on SonyLIV and FanCode via both their apps and websites.
Greetings, and welcome back to our live blog covering the French Open final between Maja Chwalińska and Mirra Andreeva. Stay tuned for all the live updates from this title clash at Roland-Garros.