French Open 2025: Norrie rocks Medvedev in five sets, Gauff breezes through – live


Key events

Norrie beats Medvedev 7-5, 6-3, 4-6, 1-6, 7-5

What a huge point at 30-all on Medvedev’s serve. Will it be game point Medvedev or match point Norrie? Game point Medvedev, as he pulls off a gutsy winner for 40-30. But Norrie, seemingly out of court, comes straight back at him for deuce! And here’s a match point! A sentence I never thought I’d be typing a few games ago. An absorbing rally plays out, which Norrie eventually wins when Medvedev hoiks long! Somehow Norrie has come from 5-3 down in the final set to take it 7-5 and take out the 11th seed, who suffers a sixth first-round exit at Roland Garros.

Share

Zverev beats Tien 6-3, 6-3, 6-4

Norrie holds to edge in front in this deciding set, for the first time since the opening game. It’s 6-5. Just as Zverev, with his neon yellow highlighter look, completes a 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Tien. A convincing opening win from last year’s runner-up.

Share

“I think I played as good as I could in the conditions,” Gauff says. “I’m from Florida, so I’m used to the wind, but it was tough. Honestly it felt like two different matches depending on the side of the court.”

She’s then asked about her rackets. “As long as I’ve been on tour my coaches put my rackets in my bag. I go on the court and realise I have no rackets. I’m blaming it on my coach!”

Share

Gauff defeats Gadecki 6-2, 6-2

Gauff, though, has got the job done, with an efficient, business-like 6-2, 6-2 victory over Australia’s Gadecki. The former finalist dealt with the windy conditions well; the biggest mis-step was her forgetting her rackets at the start of the match.

Coco Gauff eases into round two with a straight sets victory. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP
Share

Updated at 

Plenty of ooohs and aaahs and Norrie is waving his arms in the air after a game of cat and mouse on the first point, with Medvedev serving for a place in round two at 5-7, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, 5-4. 0-15 becomes 0-30 and here’s a glimmer for Norrie. Which becomes a huge opportunity at 0-40! And Norrie breaks back on the second break point!

Share

Zverev and Gauff are close to finishing too, with Gauff 6-2, 5-1 up on Gadecki and Zverev 6-3, 6-3, 5-4 ahead, with the break, against Tien. Norrie, meanwhile, decides now is the time to throw in his second underarm serve of the match, but again it doesn’t come off. He does, at least, hold though, forcing Medvedev to serve this out.

Share

This is the end game for Norrie, with Medvedev 4-3 and 30-0 up in the decider. Which is soon 40-0 after another winner. Though the Russian does throw in an awful first serve that nearly landed on the baseline. It doesn’t matter, though, he holds to love from the second serve and it’s 5-3. Norrie must serve to stay in the match.

Share

James Duckworth is out, beaten 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 by Alexander Bublik, so there won’t be an all-Aussie battle with Alex de Minaur in round two.

Share

Tomorrow’s order of play is out. Emma Raducanu v Iga Swiatek is third on Philippe Chatrier.

Share

After that 11-minute hold for Norrie, Medvedev puts the pressure straight back on the Brit with a hold to love in 80 seconds. And then breaks to 30 with a passing winner after a lengthy rally. Another ridiculous winner from Medvedev and it’s 3-1. This looks like the beginning of the end for Norrie.

Share

Sad news on Court 6, where Dimitrov has been forced to retire with a leg injury when leading Quinn, the young American qualifier, 6-2, 6-3, 2-6. It’s the 34-year-old’s fourth mid-match retirement already this year, but for Quinn he now has a great chance of reaching round three on his debut, because up next is the lucky loser Alexander Shevchenko.

Grigor Dimitrov sadly can’t continue against Ethan Quinn. Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images
Share

Updated at 

Meanwhile on Philippe Chatrier, Gauff takes the first set 6-2 against Gadecki in what feels like the time it took Norrie to win just that one game. The second seed was delayed at the start though when she somehow managed to forget her rackets. Maybe Kenin’s speedy victory in the match before caught her off guard.

Share

As the clock ticks over eight minutes for the first game of the fifth set, Medvedev fires groundstroke after groundstroke at Norrie, before changing it up with a deft drop shot that has Norrie scrambling in vain on the red clay. Break point Medvedev. Norrie saves it. Another break point Medvedev, his fourth of the game, and this time Norrie gets in on the drop shot act too. Deuce No 7. And Norrie holds after an 11-minute war of attrition! I wonder how crucial that could prove to be.

Share

Make that 6-3, 6-3 to Zverev, as the third seed finishes off an 11-shot rally on set point with a booming forehand.

Alexander Zverev is well in charge against Learner Tien. Photograph: Aurélien Morissard/AP
Share

Updated at 

As for Zverev and Gauff: Zverev, who was a set away from winning the title last year and is regaining confidence after also falling short in the Australian Open final this year, leads Tien 6-3, 5-3, while Gauff, a former finalist at Roland Garros too, has grabbed an early break against Gadecki and is 4-2 ahead in the opening set.

Share

Medvedev wins the fourth set against Norrie 6-1

Norrie, serving to stay in the fourth set at 7-5, 6-3, 4-6, 0-5, does at least stop the rot by holding from deuce. But it’s probably only delaying the inevitable. A few British fans in the crowd are using their flags as blankets given how chilly it is in Paris. Wise, given they haven’t got much reason to wave them. Medvedev gets away with a dodgy drop shot for 30-all, then brings up set point, and Norrie can’t get the serve on set point back into play. They’re going to five.

Daniil Medvedev ensures his match against Cameron Norrie goes the distance. Photograph: Lisi Niesner/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

Ouch. Norrie is broken to love. And Medvedev holds again to love. That’s 13 points in a row for the Russian. This is getting away from Norrie horribly quickly. Medvedev leads 5-0 in the fourth set.

Share

Make that 3-0 to Medvedev, with his second successive hold to love. Norrie has never beaten Medvedev, and I wonder if that’s on his mind right now. Does the Brit have the belief to pull this off? Both have been in their own slumps – Medvedev, the former US Open champion, hasn’t won a tournament in more than two years, while Norrie has dropped down the rankings from a high of world No 8 to a current position of No 81. Losing from two sets to love up here would be another big blow to the Brit’s brittle confidence.

Share

An inauspicious start from Norrie in the fourth set, as he double faults and is soon broken. It’s Norrie 7-5, 6-3, 4-6, 0-2 Medvedev.

Daniil Medvedev is roaring back into contention after his poor start against Cameron Norrie. Photograph: Yoan Valat/EPA
Share

Updated at 

De Minaur defeats Djere 6-3, 6-4, 7-6; Medvedev wins third set against Norrie 6-4

De Minaur, leading 6-3, 6-4, is trying to wrap up victory against Djere in a third-set tie-break. But here are two set points for Djere at 6-4 in the breaker after the Serb chases down the drop shot! And here’s a set point for Medvedev as Norrie fluffs his serving lines at 4-5 … where to look? … and Norrie’s shot whistles wide! Medvedev takes the third set 6-4 having lost the first two, just as De Minaur does what De Minaur does, battling, scrapping, and from 6-4 down he wins the breaker 8-6 and the match 6-3, 6-4, 7-6.

Share

Updated at 

Baptiste stuns No 23 seed Haddad Maia 4-6, 6-3, 6-1

While Quinn is on the ropes, the US has an unexpected winner in Hailey Baptiste. The 23-year-old world No 70 has beaten Brazil’s Beatriz Haddad Maia, a semi-finalist here two years ago, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. So a surprise victory for the Americans after Taylor Fritz’s and Emma Navarro’s shock losses yesterday.

Hailey Baptiste roared back to shock 23rd seed Beatriz Haddad Maia in three sets. Photograph: Yoan Valat/EPA
Share

Updated at 

The lucky loser Alexander Shevchenko has won, 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 against Serbia’s Dusan Lajovic, and he’ll face most likely Grigor Dimitrov, who’s nearly two sets to the good against Quinn, leading 6-2, 5-2.

Share
Share

Look here, Medvedev has two break points at 3-2 in the third set. The umpire is out of his chair after the second – the French Open is now the only slam that doesn’t use electronic line calling – and confirms Norrie’s shot did land on the line, so it’s deuce. From there Norrie holds for 7-5, 6-3, 3-3. The umpire is again called to court to check a call at the beginning of the next game – he’s getting as much of a workout as Medvedev, who’s pulled all over the place as Norrie grabs two break points of his own – but Medvedev holds firm and it’s 4-4.

Share

Updated at 

Kenin, the 2020 runner-up, is taking the applause of the smattering of spectators on Philippe Chatrier, as she wraps up a convincing 6-3, 6-1 victory over Gracheva. Next up there is Coco Gauff v Australia’s Olivia Gadecki.

Sofia Kenin surges through, dropping only four games against home hope Varvara Gracheva. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP
Share

Updated at 

A brief pause in Medvedev’s chattering and chuntering as he takes a medical timeout to get his finger bandaged up. It’s 2-2 in the third set, which the Russian must win to avoid a sixth first-round exit at Roland Garros.

Share

Could Azarenka be a contender here? The 35-year-old is now down at No 75 in the world, and hasn’t reached a slam final since 2020, but can still be dangerous on the right day. She’ll likely next face Kenin, who’s now 6-3, 4-1 ahead, but then it could be Madison Keys, the Australian Open champion, in round three. Keys plays Britain’s Katie Boulter in round two, who is still very much finding her feet on clay.

Share

Fun fact: Azarenka’s 6-0, 6-0 walloping of Wickmayer earlier means she’s the first player to secure a double bagel win at a grand slam in three different decades this century (2000s, 2010s, 2020s).

Share
Share

Another American up-and-comer, Ethan Quinn, is also on court. But the 21-year-old qualifier, who was the NCAA champion in 2023, is currently being given a lesson by the 34-year-old Grigor Dimitrov, who leads 6-2, 1-1.

Share

Andreeva’s victory means that Alexander Zverev is up next on Suzanne Lenglen against Learner Tien, the 19-year-old American who made a name for himself at this year’s Australian Open, becoming the youngest man since Rafael Nadal in 2005 to reach the fourth round. Tien, who’s making his Roland Garros debut, won’t be as fazed for this meeting against last year’s runner-up as you might think, because he did beat Zverev in straight sets at the Mexican Open in February. Ah, the fearlessness of youth. Tien saves a break point in the opening game and leads 1-0.

Share

Norrie wins the second set 6-3 against Medvedev

A gruelling rally at 15-all eventually goes Norrie’s way. And then Medvedev’s backhand flies long, giving Norrie two set points at 40-15. The British No 2 nets his first serve, land his second, a looping return from Medvedev … a drop shot from Norrie … and Medvedev picks him off with the pass! But Norrie wrong-foots Medvedev on the second set point, going back behind the Russian, and Norrie, having never previously taken a set off Medvedev in their four previous matches, now leads by two sets to love!

Cameron Norrie is well in charge against Daniil Medvedev. Photograph: Yoan Valat/EPA
Share

Updated at 

Kenin has claimed the first set 6-3 against Gracheva. This is how the American did it:

Share

De Minaur has given himself a two sets to love lead against Djere, just as Norrie attempts to do the same against Medvedev, leading 7-5, 5-2 with Medvedev serving. Medvedev holds to 30, shaking off some of his frustration with a darting backhand winner down the line. 5-3. So Norrie will now get the chance to serve this second set out.

Share

Also through: Marketa Vondrousova, who’s ended the run of the qualifier Oksana Selekhmeteva with a 6-4, 6-4 win, but another qualifier, Nao Hibino, has reached round two after coming out on top in her all-Japanese battle with Moyuka Uchijima, 6-1, 7-5.

Nao Hibino on her way to a straight-sets victory over her Japanese compatriot Moyuka Uchijima. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

“She played amazing, especially in the begining,” Andreeva says of slumping 3-0 down in the first set. “I just told myself to keep playing, fight for every point, and step by step I found my rhythm.” The Russian’s asked what time she had to get up to play at 11am. “I wasn’t happy getting up so early at 6.40am,” she says. Which I think is exactly how Medvedev feels today, though he is now on the board in the second set and has one of the breaks back, trailing 7-5, 4-2.

Share

Andreeva advances 6-4, 6-3

Kenin, having whizzed into a 3-0 lead, is now 4-3 ahead with the break, while Andreeva has a match point against Bucsa at 6-4, 5-3, which the tremendously talented teenager takes to wrap up the match in just over one hour and 20 minutes. Last year’s semi-finalist is up and running in Paris.

Share

Updated at 

Medvedev is cursing his coach between every point, but does regain enough focus to fire down an ace and a forehand winner for 40-15. But he balances that out with a double fault and a netted forehand. Deuce. Norrie is jumping up and down on the baseline ready to receive; he’d quite like a double break. And he gets it when Medvedev can only send Norrie’s attempted pass into the stands! Norrie leads 7-5, 4-0.

Share

The self-combustible Medvedev is ranting and raving as Norrie breaks for 7-5, 2-0; Andreeva is going along nicely at 6-4, 4-2; De Minaur is 6-3, 2-2 up on Djere; and Vondrousova, the 2023 Wimbledon champion, is a game away from round two, leading Selekhmeteva, the qualifier, 6-4, 5-2.

Daniil Medvedev vents as the second set begins to run away from him. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

Azarenka will face the winner of the Sofia Kenin v Varvara Gracheva match, which is just getting started on Philippe Chatrier. Kenin is a former French Open runner-up, having lost to Iga Swiatek in the 2020 final, so can’t entirely be ruled out of the conversation despite some wildly inconsistent results of late. Gracheva was born in Russia but has been representing France since 2023, so will have the crowd on her side, even though most of them haven’t bothered to turn up yet.

Share

Norrie wins the first set 7-5 against Medvedev

Norrie holds for 6-5 and then gives himself a set point after an absorbing rally at 30-all ends with a winning volley for the British No 2! Medvedev’s face is glowering like the grey Parisian sky. And the Russian is even more furious when Norrie takes the set with a brilliant backhand! He walks off court to try to regain his composure. That was typical Norrie, hanging in there and relishing the hard work when 5-3 down and when Medvedev served for the set at 5-3.

Share

Already in the locker room is Victoria Azarenka, who’s served up a Parisian bagel to poor Yanina Wickmayer, the 35-year-old Belgian, who’s playing her last Roland Garros.

Share

The quiet and unassuming Cameron Norrie suddenly decides he quite fancies being Nick Kyrgios and goes for the underarm serve in an attempt to catch out Medvedev, who is stood well beyond the baseline, but it hits the net. The Brit still manages to hold though for 4-5 – and Medvedev does seem distracted, because it’s 0-30, 15-40 and then game Norrie! They’re back on serve at 5-5.

Cameron Norrie is seemingly enjoying himself against Daniil Medvedev. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

Set points for Andreeva too, at 5-4, 15-40 on Bucsa’s serve. Having gone 3-0 down, Andreeva has won five of the past six games. A couple of errors from the 18-year-old and it’s deuce, but Bucsa blinks with an errant backhand and Andreeva’s rasping return secures the set 6-4.

Share

A couple more sets on the board: the lucky loser from Kazakhstan Alexander Shevchenko leads another Serb, Dusan Lajovic, 6-2, while Moyuka Uchijima is 6-1 up in her all-Japanese affair with Nao Hibino.

Share

Updated at 

Andreeva is level in her match for the first time, at 4-4 against Bucsa, while Alex de Minaur, who is always up for the battle, even on a cold, possibly rainy day in Paris, has started strongly against Serbia’s Laslo Djere, leading 4-1.

Share

Ach. Medvedev teaches Norrie a lesson in taking your chances as he breaks with his first break points of the match for 3-2, and backs it up for 4-2. The 2021 US Open champion has well and truly woken up now, and whacks away a huge forehand winner, but Norrie catches his breath to hold for 4-3.

Share

Elsewhere Mirra Andreeva, the 18-year-old Russian prodigy who reached the semi-finals last year and is having an even better 2025 after winning in Indian Wells and Dubai, has recovered from 3-0 down to 3-2 against Spain’s Cristina Bucsa. And the first set of the day goes to Victoria Azarenka, who’s shut out Yanina Wickmayer in the battle of the 35-year-olds with a 6-0 rout.

Mirra Andreeva takes charge of the first set against Cristina Bucsa. Photograph: Aurélien Morissard/AP
Share

Updated at 

Norrie, leading 2-1 on serve, has two more break points against Medvedev on Simonne Matheiu, to add to the one he had in the second game. But these come and go too, the second when Medvedev draws Norrie in with a drop shot before pulling off the pass. After a few deuces Medvedev holds, but he’s not looking too comfortable.

Share

Naomi Osaka has a tendency to be hard on herself and yesterday was no different after her absorbing 6-7 (1), 6-1, 6-4 defeat against the 1oth seed, Paula Badosa. The four-times grand slam champion has struggled to rediscover her best form since returning to tennis last January after the birth of her daughter, and said yesterday: “I think as time goes on, I feel like I should be doing better. But also I hate disappointing people. So, like, even with Patrick [Mouratoglou], I was thinking this just now, but he goes from working with the greatest player ever [Serena Williams] to, like, what the fuck this is. You know what I mean?”

Osaka’s never been the most comfortable on grass, but hopefully she can gather some momentum during the US hard-court swing. Women’s tennis is all the better for her being in it.

Share

… and Medvedev suddenly springs into life with three quick points to hold. It’s 1-1.

Share

Norrie has held to 30 in the opening game against Medvedev. This is a tough match-up for the Brit, who trails their head-to-head 4-0, including a straight-sets defeat in Rome this month. In fact Norrie has never managed to take a set off the Russian. But Medvedev notoriously hates early matches, and he seems as if he’d still rather be in bed as he slides 15-30 down on serve. Norrie thinks he’s pulled off a winner but it’s called out, but then finishes a well-constructed point with a backhand volley. Break point …

Share

The players have weaved and wound their way to the courts, where most of the spectators look as if they’re dressed for winter. It’s cold, blustery and overcast in Paris today, so it’s not going to be easy for the players. Conditions will be heavy. And there could be some rain.

Just getting under way: Cameron Norrie v Daniil Medvedev, Alex de Minaur v Laslo Djere, Mirra Andreeva v Cristina Bucsa, Marketa Vondrousova v Oksana Selekhmeteva, Victoria Azarenka v Yanina Wickmayer, Beatriz Haddad Maia v Hailey Baptiste and A Shevchenko (not that one – instead it’s the lucky loser Alexander Shevchenko from Kazakhstan) v Dusan Lajovic. Though it has got me thinking about Diego Forlan making his pro tennis debut at the age of 45 last year …

Share

Some more reading:

Share

Djokovic, with a little spring in his 38-year-old step after winning the Geneva Open on Saturday, his first title since the Olympics last summer, will begin his latest bid for grand slam No 25 in the third match on Philippe Chatrier. He’s playing at Roland Garros minus Andy Murray, of course, after the pair ended their coaching relationship a couple of weeks ago, and he spoke about that yesterday in his pre-tournament press conference, including Murray’s quip about how Djokovic had won in Geneva because he now has “a proper coach”.

Share

Updated at 

Andre Agassi and Chrissie Evert are talking on TNT Sports. I could listen to them all day. Agassi is reflecting on when he decided to retire and how Novak Djokovic, whenever the moment comes, must retire on his own terms. He also talks about how strange it was for him to carry on playing when Pete Sampras retired and wonders how Djokovic now, in the absence of Federer, Nadal and Murray, feels being “the last one at the dance”. Evert, meanwhile, says “obsession” must be driving Djokovic to carry on playing because her body “couldn’t even face getting out of bed” by the time she was 31.

Share

Today’s order of play on the main courts

Court Philippe Chatrier (12pm start/11am BST)

Varvara Gracheva (France) v 31-Sofia Kenin (US)
Olivia Gadecki (Australia) v 2-Coco Gauff (US)
Mackenzie McDonald (US) v Novak Djokovic (Serbia)
Gael Monfils (France) v Hugo Dellien (Bolivia)

Court Suzanne Lenglen (11am/10am BST)
6-Mirra Andreeva (Russia) v Cristina Bucsa (Spain)
3-Alexander Zverev (Germany) v Learner Tien (US)
Anca Todoni (Romania) v 3-Jessica Pegula (US)
Mattia Bellucci (Italy) v 5-Jack Draper (Great Britain)

Court Simonne Mathieu (11am/10am BST)
11-Daniil Medvedev (Russia) v Cameron Norrie (Great Britain)
25-Magdalena Frech (Poland) v Ons Jabeur (Tunisia)
Corentin Moutet (France) v Clement Tabur (France)
14-Karolina Muchova (Czech Republic) v Alycia Parks (US)

Share

Preamble

Bonjour le monde! Et bienvenue au jour trois de notre couverture de Roland Garros 2025!

Despite the first round stretching over three days, there’s still plenty of names beginning their campaigns today. Novak Djokovic, Alexander Zverev and Coco Gauff? Oui. British trio Jack Draper, Cameron Norrie (v Daniil Medvedev) and Sonay Kartal? Bien sûr. Alex de Minaur, Andrey Rublev, Jessica Pegula, Mirra Andreeva, Ons Jabeur, Victoria Azarenka, Gael Monfils, Grigor Dimitrov and former runners-up Karolina Muchova and Marketa Vondrousova? C’est ça. And the much-talked about Roland Garros debutants Joao Fonseca, Jakub Mensik and Ethan Quinn? On y va!

L’action commence: 11h à Paris/10am BST.

Share





Source link

  • Related Posts

    చట్టం: జన్మహక్కు పౌరసత్వానికి వ్యతిరేకంగా యుద్ధం

    అధ్యక్షుడు ట్రంప్ తన జన్మహక్కు పౌరసత్వాన్ని ముక్కలు చేయాలని “చట్టబద్ధమైన చికానరీ కొంచెం” కోరుకుంటున్నట్లు చెప్పారు. స్టీఫెన్ I. వ్లాడెక్ ఇన్ న్యూయార్క్ టైమ్స్. ముగ్గురు ఫెడరల్ న్యాయమూర్తులు జనవరి కార్యనిర్వాహక ఉత్తర్వులను అమలు చేయకుండా పరిపాలనను నిషేధించారు. 14 వ…

    లండన్ కౌన్సిల్ ఆశ్రయం పొందే బిల్లుకు మించి గృహ కార్యాలయాలకు వ్యతిరేకంగా చట్టపరమైన చర్యలను £ 5 మిలియన్లకు పైగా పరిగణిస్తుంది

    హోటళ్ల నుండి తరిమివేయబడిన వలసదారుల సంఖ్యను పెంచడానికి ఇది సహాయపడుతోందని హిల్లింగ్‌డన్ కౌన్సిల్ తెలిపింది Source link

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *