French Open 2025: Iga Swiatek beats
Emma Raducanu to extend her bid for a 4th straight title
[May 29, 2025]
By HOWARD FENDRICH
PARIS (AP) — Iga Swiatek is always quite good against Emma Raducanu.
Always quite good at the French Open, too, of course.
So it made sense that the latest matchup between these two Grand
Slam champions, which came in the second round at Court Philippe-Chatrier
on Wednesday, would end up with Swiatek on the right side of a 6-1,
6-2 result.
“I felt good on court, so I could do whatever I planned to, whatever
I wanted to,” said Swiatek, who improved to 5-0 against Raducanu and
ran her winning streak in the clay-court Grand Slam tournament to 23
matches.

“This place inspires me,” Swiatek said, “and makes me work harder.”
Truth be told, she was not made to work all that hard during this
encounter, which lasted only 1 hour, 19 minutes in what Swiatek
described as “tricky” wind.
The 23-year-old from Poland was in fine form against 2021 U.S. Open
champion Raducanu, putting together a whopping 32-8 edge in winners
and saving all four break points she faced while taking all eight of
her service games.
“It was so one-way and so one-sided,” Raducanu said. “I guess when
Iga is playing well on a court that she’s very familiar with, the
difference is huge.”
This follows a 6-1, 6-0 victory over Raducanu at the Australian Open
this January and now means that Swiatek has won all 10 sets the two
have played against each other.
Swiatek, who agreed to accept a one-month suspension in a doping
case late last year, owns a total of five major trophies, including
one at the U.S. Open.
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But it's been a bit of a rough stretch for Swiatek
by her lofty standards. She hasn't been as far as a final at any
tournament since winning the championship at last year's French
Open.
That title was her fourth in Paris and third in a
row. Swiatek is aiming to become the only woman with four
consecutive trophies at the French Open in the Open era, which began
in 1968. Monica Seles and Justine Henin both also won three
straight.
Swiatek's aura of invincibility on clay was pierced a bit when she
wound up losing in the semifinals of the 2024 Paris Olympics, which
were contested at Roland-Garros, and she went home with a bronze
medal.
Her recent showings on the clay-court circuit included ceding sets
by scores of 6-0 and 6-1 — the sort of lopsided outcomes Swiatek is
usually on the right side of — and losses in her second matches at
both Stuttgart and Rome.
Add it all up, and she arrived in Paris ranked only No. 5, her first
time outside the top two in about three years.
“In recent weeks, every time I stepped out, I felt differently,”
Swiatek said. “Like sometimes, I felt super confident and
everything, and sometimes I just lacked energy. So it was hard to
navigate that. Honestly, sometimes it happens. Not every day is
going to be the same.”
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