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French Open LIVE: Scores and latest updates from Roland Garros after Iga Swiatek wins

The French Open continues at Roland Garros as Iga Swiatek resumes her title defence, with Coco Gauff, Elena Rybakina and Ons Jabeur all in action on day five. Swiatek, who celebrated her 22nd birthday on Wednesday, faces the American Claire Liu while Rybakina takes on the Czech teenager Linda Noskova.

In the men’s draw, Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz remain on a collision course at the French Open after both advanced to the third round. Djokovic kept his focus on the court amid his latest controversy as he saw off Marton Fucsovics in straight sets.

France’s great home hope, Caroline Garcia, was bundled out after a dramatic encounter with Russian Anna Blinkova while Gael Monfils was forced to pull out due to injury before his match with Holger Rune.

Cameron Norrie, the last British player in the draw, knocked out a French opponent for the second consecutive round in a row as he defeated home favourite Lucas Pouille in straight sets.

Follow live scores and updates from the French Open below:

French Open latest scores and updates

  • Where can I watch the French Open 2023?

  • French Open order of play on Day 5

  • Coco Gauff and Ons Jabeur in second-round action this evening

  • Elena Rybakina through to third round with 6-3 6-3 win over Linda Noskova

  • Novak Djokovic earns straight-set victory over Marton Fucsovics amid latest controversy

  • French Open under fire again over no women’s matches in night sessions

  • Iga Swiatek through in straight sets

French Open: Iga Swiatek 6-4 6-0 Claire Liu - Game, Set and Match!

16:08 , Karl Matchett

Ruthless from the world No1. Liu tries to put up a fight until the last but Iga Swiatek is relentless and looking in terrific form.

She marches on into the third round and continues her quest to retain the crown she won at Roland Garros last year. One hour 29 minutes in total here today.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 6-4 5-0 Claire Liu - Break!

16:03 , Karl Matchett

Two break points for Swiatek and she make full use of them to break Liu’s serve again. Only needs one, in fact.

That’s Swiatek now set to serve for the set and match and a place in third round which has never been in doubt.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 6-4 4-0 Claire Liu

16:02 , Jamie Braidwood

For a moment, it looked like the first set was really repeating itself. Iga Swiatek went 3-0 love up, but then Claire Liu forced a break point. This time Swiatek shuts the door as she saves the break point chance, and then gets the hold to move 4-0 ahead.

Meanwhile, Jannik Sinner is locked in a wild fourth set with Daniel Altmaier. Sinner has been up a break twice, served for the match, but has been dragged into another tiebreak against the German.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 6-4 2-0 Claire Liu - Break!

15:40 , Jamie Braidwood

Swiatek repeats the trick at the start of the second set with an opening break, taking advantage of a few more of the unforced errors that are starting to creep into Liu’s game.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 6-4 Claire Liu - Set!

15:30 , Jamie Braidwood

It’s quite fitting that Swiatek takes the opening set with a forehand winner. There have been loads so far and although Swiatek has been a bit untidy at times (15 unforced errors), Liu battled well and didn’t fold when Swiatek took the opening three games. The American was able to level but then Swiatek upped the power and takes the set in 52 minutes.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 5-3 Claire Liu - Break!

15:19 , Jamie Braidwood

This is turning out to be a fun one - the winners continue to flow and Swiatek ensures there is another break of serve, this time as the world No 1 edges ahead once more. It’s followed by the hold and it puts Swiatek a game away from the opener.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 3-3 Claire Liu - Break!

15:09 , Jamie Braidwood

Remarkable! Liu gets her second straight break and it’s now back on serve on Philippe-Chatrier. The American has found her accuracy to get back on level terms.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 3-2 Claire Liu - Break!

15:04 , Jamie Braidwood

Ah! Perhaps not. Liu breaks straight back with an impressive response to Swiatek’s early dominance.

After Daniel Altmaier won the second set against Jannik Sinner, the Italian hit back to to the third 6-1. It’s now level on serve in the fourth.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 3-0 Claire Liu - Break!

14:53 , Jamie Braidwood

Emphatic from Swiatek! The Pole steps into another short ball from Liu and powers away the forehand winner down the line. It’s 3-0 already, and you have to think Swiatek smells another bagel - even at this early stage.

French Open: Iga Swiatek 1-0 Claire Liu - Break!

14:43 , Jamie Braidwood

The danger signs are flashing immediately for Claire Liu as Iga Swiatek steps into a short ball midcourt and smacks a forehand winner. It sets up an early break point, and although the American saves it, another soon arrives as she sends a smash way over the baseline. Liu then blinks on a simple forehand - which again goes long - and Swiatek gets the early break.

French Open: Tomorrow’s order of play

14:37 , Jamie Braidwood

The schedule is out for the start of the third round tomorrow:

Philippe-Chatrier

Jessica Pegula v Elise Mertens

Aryna Sabalenka v Rakhimova

Novak Djokovic v Alejandro Davidovich Fokina

Carlos Alcaraz v Denis Shapovalov

Suzanne-Lenglen

Daria Kasatkina v Peyton Stearns

Andrey Rublev v Lorenzo Sonego

Sloane Stephens v Yulia Putintseva

Stefanos Tsitsipas v Diego Schwartzmann

Simonne-Mathieu

Karen Khachanov v Thanasi Kokkinakis

Elina Svitolina v Anna Blinkova

Cameron Norrie v Lorenzo Musetti

Karolina Muchova vs Irina-Camelia Begu

French Open: Iga Swiatek vs Claire Liu

14:24 , Jamie Braidwood

Up next on Philippe-Chatrier is the defending champion and world No 1. Iga Swiatek celebrated her 22nd birthday yesterday and is back in action this afternoon as the Pole resumes her Roland Garros defence. Claire Liu, the world No 102, faces the unenviable task.

French Open: Game, set and match!

14:18 , Jamie Braidwood

Mirra Andreeva goes through! The 16-year-old takes out a French player at Roland Garros, and emphatically so. A 6-1 6-2 victory over Diane Parry secures her place in the next round. Another good luck text from Andy Murray to come?

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

French Open: Casper Ruud 6-3 6-2 4-6 7-5 Giulio Zeppieri - Game, set and match!

14:09 , Jamie Braidwood

Casper Ruud finishes the job against Giulio Zeppieri - who battled hard to take it to a fourth but was undone by cramp right at the end. Ruud advances and will play either Thiago Agustin Tirante or Zhizhen Zhang next. Nice draw.

French Open: Latest scores

14:00 , Jamie Braidwood

Daniel Altmaier takes the tiebreak to level the match against Jannik Sinner! The German had seen three set points come and go, but then holds his nerve to put away the overhead. Nicely done.

Over on Chatrier, Giulio Zeppieri has broken back in the fourth set against Casper Ruud - but the Norwegian has the chance to break straight back. The back news for the Italian is he is cramping badly - and has needed to take a medical timeout.

French Open: Latest scores

13:41 , Jamie Braidwood

Daniel Altmaier ensures he gets at least a tiebreak against Jannik Sinner in the second set on Suzanne-Lenglen.

Meanwhile Casper Ruud is now closing in on the third round. The Norwegian gets the break in the fourth and is now two games away from victory.

French Open highlights: Rybakina through in straight sets

13:41 , Jamie Braidwood

Elena Rybakina was in impressive form earlier as the Italian Open champion extended her hot streak with a straight-sets win to advance to the third round.

French Open: Upset alert!

13:35 , Jamie Braidwood

Breakthrough for Tomas Martin Etcheverry!

The 23-year-old Argentine takes out the 18th seed Alex de Minaur in straight sets to advance to the third round of a grand slam for the first time.

Etcheverry’s reward is an open draw, created by Daniil Medvedev’s shock exit on Tuesday.

Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka is the highest remaining seed in that eighth of the draw - so there is going to be a surprise quarter-finalist.

French Open: Latest scores

13:31 , Jamie Braidwood

Casper Ruud has been taken to a fourth set by Giulio Zeppieri - with the world No 127 hanging on against last year’s finalist.

France have just three players left across the men’s and women’s singles but one of them, Diane Parry, has just lost her first set 1-6 to Mirra Andreeva.

Andreeva is one to watch, by the way. The 16-year-old is now a set away from the third round and has been receiving support from Andy Murray this week.

Aryna Sabalenka confronted by Ukrainian journalist over stance on war

13:27 , Karl Matchett

Aryna Sabalenka was confronted by a Ukrainian journalist in a tense exchange at the French Open on Wednesday, where the Belarusian declined to answer questions about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Sabalenka, the Australian Open champion and world No 2, was asked by the reporter to condemn Belarus’ role in supporting Russia’s invasion and whether she personally supports authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko - who is a close ally of Vladimir Putin.

After her first-round win over Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk on Sunday, Sabalenka said, “Nobody in this world, Russian athletes or Belarusian athletes, support the war”.

But as Sabalenka advanced to the third round on Wednesday, the Ukrainian journalist asked Sabalenka to condemn the invasion and the role Belarus is playing to support Russia in the conflict.

Full details:

Aryna Sabalenka confronted by Ukrainian journalist over stance on war

Does Novak Djokovic’s off-court controversy overshadow his tennis genius?

13:15 , Karl Matchett

Novak Djokovic might be as well-known for his off-court controversies as his tennis brilliance. The case of his detention and deportation from Australia drew worldwide attention and sparked anger in his homeland, Serbia. His father, Srdjan, remained adamant that Djokovic was “the Spartacus of the new world” and that “he is like water and water paves its own path”.

His father’s reaction may be indicative, but Djokovic’s unorthodox world view and scepticism of societal norms have been advertised, and self-promoted, for several years. After all, it was in his own book, Serve to Win, that he detailed the moment his transformative gluten-free diet began in 2010, when he self-diagnosed a celiac allergy by pressing a slice of bread against his abdomen.

The true depth of Djokovic’s belief in alternative treatments was epitomised by his vehement opposition to undergoing surgery in 2017. Despite struggling with a near-intolerable pain in his elbow, which led to Djokovic failing to reach a grand slam semi-final in a calendar year for the first time in over a decade, he was insistent that a cure could be found through holistic medicine. When he eventually succumbed in February 2018, Djokovic claimed he cried for three days after waking up from the operation. “Every time I thought about what I did, I felt like I had failed myself,” he said.

Does Novak Djokovic’s off-court controversy overshadow his genius?

French Open: Latest scores

13:00 , Karl Matchett

Kayla Day has beaten Madison Keys! The 23-year-old knocks out the No20 seed 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 to progress to the third round.

And Beatriz Haddad Maia has followed her through, winning that third and final set to knock out Diana Shnaider 6-2, 5-7, 6-4.

In the men’s singles, Jannik Sinner has taken the first set against Daniel Altmaier, while Casper Ruud is two sets up over unseeded Giulio Zeppieri.

Borna Coric and Pedro Cachin are into their fourth set, Cachin taking the last two after No15 seed Coric won the first.

French Open: Latest scores

12:39 , Karl Matchett

Elsewhere this afternoon, in the women’s singles Diana Shnaider and Beatriz Haddad Maia are locked at one set apiece. The latter, seeded 14th, has a 4-2 lead in the third set.

Rebecca Peterson and Wang Xinyu have just started on Court 12 and on Court 9, Elisabetta Cocciaretoo is closing in on a first-set advantage over Simona Waltert.

French Open: Latest scores

12:29 , Jamie Braidwood

Kayla Day stood a game away from the biggest win of her career but Madison Keys has broken back in the final set! Day still leads 5-3 and will have another chance to close out the upset against the 20th seed.

Casper Ruud is now two sets up on Philippe-Chatrier, while Jannik Sinner and Daniel Altmaier have traded breaks in the opening set. It’s currently 4-4.

French Open: Emma Raducanu announces latest coaching split

12:07 , Jamie Braidwood

Emma Raducanu has announced the end of her latest partnership with a coach, as the 20-year-old continues her recovery from injury.

The 2021 US Open winner is currently sidelined after operations on both hands and her left ankle, after opting for several surgeries to correct a series of injuries, the latest of which saw her pull out of the Madrid Open.

She has thus missed out on this week’s French Open and is set to miss Wimbledon too, along with most or all of the grass-court season.

In the meantime, her search for a longer-lasting coach will go on, with Raducanu announcing that she has parted ways with Sebastian Sachs after fewer than six months working together.

More here:

Emma Raducanu announces latest coaching split

French Open: Latest scores

11:59 , Jamie Braidwood

Casper Ruud isn’t waiting around as he takes the opening set 6-4 against Giulio Zeppieri.

Madison Keys has levelled the all-American match against Kayla Day and it’s now into a decider.

Alex De Minaur is down a set to the Argentine Tomas Martin Etcheverry.

Jannik Sinner is down underway against Daniel Altmaier on Suzanne-Lenglen.

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 6-3 Linda Noskova - Game, set and match!

11:45 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina now has 30 wins for the season and is looking just as impressive on clay as she has done on grass and hard courts. That’s her eighth win in a row - a run that extends back to her Italian Open triumph. It’s unlikely that her third-round opponent, either Sara Sorribes Tormo or Petra Martic, will cause too many problems.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 6-3 Linda Noskova - Game, set and match!

11:36 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina wins! That last game was the story of the match - Noskova had opportunities at times, but couldn’t take them. Rybakina saves four out of four break points on her way to winning in straight sets and was just too good when it really counted for the 18-year-old Czech. The Wimbledon champion is through to the third round.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 5-3 Linda Noskova - Break!

11:33 , Jamie Braidwood

And just like that, Rybakina drills a return at Noskova’s feet and gets the crucial break of serve in the second set! But this isn’t over yet, now Noskova has break point on Rybakina’s serve as she looks to close it out...

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 4-3 Linda Noskova

11:27 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina holds off a Noskova break point to edge ahead once more on serve - with the Czech now 0/3 on break point chances.

Ruud has meanwhile got off to a flying start against the world No 132 Giulio Zeppieri by winning the first three games.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 3-3 Linda Noskova

11:19 , Jamie Braidwood

Still on serve in the second after a couple of comfortable holds for both Rybakina and Noskova. Meanwhile, last year’s men’s runner-up Casper Ruud is underway in the opening match on Philippe Chatrier.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 2-1 Linda Noskova

11:11 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina’s first serve is working nicely and her game is flowing her there. The 23-year-old has won 13 of her first 15 points when the first serve lands.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 Linda Noskova

10:58 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina will get to serve first as we quickly begin the second set.

There’s a battle of two Americans over on Simonne-Mathieu, but it’s the world No 138 Kayla Day who has taken the first set against the 20th seed Madison Keys: 6-2 the score.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 6-3 Linda Noskova - Set!

10:54 , Jamie Braidwood

And there’s the set! Although it took Rybakina some time to grind Noskova down during a lengthy deuce game. The Czech battled well but Rybakina was too strong and a double fault wa a poor way for the opener to end.

Rybakina is looking like a real contender here.

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

French Open: Elena Rybakina 5-3 Linda Noskova

10:43 , Jamie Braidwood

Again, Rybakina calmly steers herself back from 0-30 down on serve as the number four seed moves a game away from the opening set. A lovely pick-up volley on the run then moves her to 0-30 on the Noskova serve...

French Open: Aryna Sabalenka confronted by Ukrainian journalist over stance on war

10:38 , Jamie Braidwood

Aryna Sabalenka was confronted by a Ukrainian journalist in a tense exchange at the French Open on Wednesday, where the Belarusian declined to answer questions about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Sabalenka, the Australian Open champion and world No 2, was asked by the reporter to condemn Belarus’ role in supporting Russia’s invasion and whether she personally supports authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko - who is a close ally of Vladimir Putin.

After her first-round win over Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk on Sunday, Sabalenka said, “Nobody in this world, Russian athletes or Belarusian athletes, support the war”.

But as Sabalenka advanced to the third round on Wednesday, the Ukrainian journalist asked Sabalenka to condemn the invasion and the role Belarus is playing to support Russia in the conflict.

“I’ve got no comments to you,” Sabalenka said in response to the journalist during her post-match press conference.

More here:

Aryna Sabalenka confronted by Ukrainian journalist over stance on war

French Open: Elena Rybakina 3-2 Linda Noskova

10:33 , Jamie Braidwood

Rybakina rallies from 0-30 down in the next game but recovers smoothly with a calm overhand and backhand crosscourt winner. Noskova recovers well to hold her own serve and the Czech is showing plenty of promise in the early stages.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 2-1 Linda Noskova - Break!

10:24 , Jamie Braidwood

A long deuce game in the morning sun on Suzanne-Lenglen. Rybakina gets a look at a break point on Noskova’s serve but the Czech saves it and then has several chances to get the hold. But Rybakina shows impressive defence and then plants a return on the baseline on the next break point. Noskova nets and Rybakina gets the early break.

French Open: Elena Rybakina 0-0 Linda Noskova

10:11 , Jamie Braidwood

Underway! Quite confusingly, though, Rybakina and Noskova are wearing the exact same outfit - a pink top, a dark skirt, and a dark visor.

French Open: Elena Rybakina resumes Roland Garros bid

09:58 , Jamie Braidwood

Elena Rybakina is among the early starters on day five of the French Open as the Wimbledon champion takes on Czech teenager Linda Noskova.

Rybakina also faced Czech teenager in the first round, defeating 16-year-old Brenda Fruhvirtova in straight sets to open her Roland Garros bid.

“First matches not the easiest. I didn’t start that well. I was rushing a bit. After I started a bit better, so overall happy with the first match.”

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

French Open: Upcoming schedule

09:48 , Jamie Braidwood

Court Philippe-Chatrier

From 10:45 (all times BST)

Giulio Zeppieri (Ita) v Casper Ruud

Court Suzanne-Lenglen

From 10:00

Elena Rybakina v Linda Noskova

Court Simeone-Mathieu

From 10:00

Kayla Day v Madison Keys

French Open: Cameron Norrie urges video replays after French Open dispute over double bounce

09:38 , Jamie Braidwood

Cameron Norrie said video replays should be used to help umpires make the right call on dubious points after he got away with a double bounce in Wednesday’s second round victory over Lucas Pouille at the French Open.

France’s Pouille thought he had won a point in the third set after a deft drop shot, but umpire Eva Asderaki failed to see the ball bounce twice, as Norrie won the point amid boos from the home crowd.

Pouille said Norrie was under no obligation to concede the point as players are sometimes unsure if the ball bounces twice. But he added that the umpire should have had the option to check the replay, a view shared by Norrie.

“I think that would be great... We have the technology to do it. I don’t know why we’re not doing it in all aspects,” Norrie told reporters after he beat Pouille 6-1 6-3 6-3.

“Sometimes tournaments where they have Hawkeye (technology) for the TV and then for the match they don’t use it... I think we should be using it.

“We all make mistakes, the umpires make mistakes. I think he’s right. It was just one of those calls, a tough call in the moment. From the replay, for me, it looks like she got it wrong.”

Reuters

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

Gael Monfils out of Roland Garros with wrist injury

09:28 , Jamie Braidwood

Sixth seed Holger Rune was given free passage through to the third round after Gael Monfils called a press conference late on Wednesday evening to announce he was pulling out of their clash scheduled for the night session on Thursday because of a wrist injury.

The 36-year-old played the match of the tournament so far on Tuesday night, fighting off cramp to defeat Sebastian Baez in five sets, and he said: “I’m not really sure what I feel, but it’s more than being disappointed. How many Roland Garroses will I play?”

Alexander Zverev vs Alex Molcan will now headline the night session on Philippe-Chatrier tonight.

 (Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

French Open under fire again over no women’s matches in night sessions

09:18 , Jamie Braidwood

Attention is ramping up again on the French Open’s scheduling, with the night session so far exclusively featuring men’s matches.

Tournament director Amelie Mauresmo had to apologise last year after saying men’s matches had more appeal as a justification for only one women’s match featuring in the 10 prime-time sessions across the fortnight.

The French Open is unique among the grand slams in having only one match in its late slot and, in the first five days, that will be a men’s contest every time.

With fifth seed Caroline Garcia bowing out on Wednesday, the chances of a women’s match making the cut have reduced further, and former finalist Sloane Stephens hit out after her 6-2 6-1 win over Varvara Gracheva.

“I’m on the player council and we’ve had a lot of conversations about this and we’ve had a lot of conversations about equality,” said the American. “Four out of four men’s matches. That’s not what we talk about. That’s not what we’re about.”

French Open under fire again over no women’s matches in night sessions

French Open: Novak Djokovic driven by ‘drama’ as Kosovo message fall-out continues

09:11 , Jamie Braidwood

Novak Djokovic admitted he is fuelled by drama as the fall-out continued from his controversial message about Kosovo.

He told Serbian media he would do it again but, after beating Hungary’s Marton Fucsovics 7-6 (2) 6-0 6-3 in the second round, he opted just for a signature and smiley face.

At his post-match press conference, Djokovic said: “I would say it again, but I don’t need to because you have my quotes if you want to reflect on that.

“Of course I’m aware that a lot of people would disagree, but it is what it is. It’s something that I stand for. So that’s all. Drama-free grand slam, I don’t think it can happen for me. I guess that drives me, as well.”

By Eleanor Crooks

Djokovic earns straight-set victory over Fucsovics amid latest controversy

French Open order of play - Thursday 31 May

09:05 , Jamie Braidwood

Court Philippe-Chatrier

From 10:45 (all times BST)

1 - Giulio Zeppieri (Ita) v (4) Casper Ruud (Nor)

2 - (1) Iga Swiatek (Pol) v Claire Liu (USA)

3 - Oceane Dodin (Fra) v (7) Ons Jabeur (Tun)

Not before 20:15

4 - (22) Alexander Zverev vs Alex Molcan

Court Suzanne-Lenglen

From 10:00

1 - (4) Elena Rybakina (Kaz) v Linda Noskova (Cze)

2 - (8) Jannik Sinner (Ita) v Daniel Altmaier (Ger)

3 - Julia Grabher (Aut) v (6) Coco Gauff (USA)

4 - Arthur Rinderknech (Fra) v (9) Taylor Fritz (USA)

Court Simeone-Mathieu

From 10:00

1 - Kayla Day (USA) v (20) Madison Keys (USA)

2 - Diane Parry (Fra) v Mirra Andreeva (N)

3 - Aslan Karatsev (N) v (12) Francis Tiafoe (USA)

The full order of play can be found here

French Open order of play on day five

09:03 , Jamie Braidwood

The French Open continues on Thursday and women’s No1 seed Iga Swiatek returns to action for her second-round tie.

Wednesday saw Britain’s Cameron Norrie fire his way through to the third round in straight sets, with Novak Djokovic following him through later on.

But there was an upset for the home fans in the women’s singles as Caroline Garcia was knocked out by unseeded Anna Blinkova, a Russian-born athlete playing under no flag at Roland Garros.

Aryna Sabalenka, Jessica Pegula and Elina Svitolina were among the others to make it through to the third round in the women’s draw, with Carlos Alcaraz and Stefanos Tsitsipas doing likewise in the men’s.

Here’s the order of play for day five in Paris.

French Open order of play and schedule on Day 5 including Iga Swiatek

How to watch the French Open 2023

09:01 , Jamie Braidwood

You can watch the French Open live on Eurosport in the UK.  The action will be broadcast on Eurosport’s TV channels, or fans can tune into Discovery+ to stream the tournament, where an Entertainment & Sport pass is available for either £6.99/month or £59.99/year.

Watch every moment of Roland-Garros LIVE and exclusive on discovery+, Eurosport and Eurosport App

Good morning

08:59 , Jamie Braidwood

The French Open continues at Roland Garros as Iga Swiatek resumes her title defence, with Coco Gauff, Elena Rybakina and Ons Jabeur all in action on day five. Swiatek, who celebrated her 22nd birthday on Wednesday, faces the American Claire Liu while Rybakina takes on the Czech teenager Linda Noskova.

In the men’s draw, Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz remain on a collision course at the French Open after both advanced to the third round. Djokovic kept his focus on the court amid his latest controversy as he saw off Marton Fucsovics in straight sets.

France’s great home hope, Caroline Garcia, was bundled out after a dramatic encounter with Russian Anna Blinkova while Gael Monfils was forced to pull out due to injury before his match with Holger Rune.

Cameron Norrie, the last British player in the draw, knocked out a French opponent for the second consecutive round in a row as he defeated home favourite Lucas Pouille in straight sets.

Follow live scores and updates with today’s live blog