French Open, Novak Djokovic
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Alcaraz beats Sinner to defend French Open title
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French Open is set to begin on Sunday, and the pressure is officially on for defending men's and women's singles champions Carlos Alcaraz and Iga Swiatek.
Familiar names are at the top of the odds ahead of the French Open, although there are some noteworthy shifts among the order.
Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz and world number one Jannik Sinner resume the hottest rivalry in men's tennis at the French Open, where Novak Djokovic will fly the flag for the old guard as the claycourt Grand Slam enters the post-Rafa Nadal era.
Novak Djokovic is one win from a 100th career singles title on the ATP tour after advancing to the final at the Geneva Open
The last time an American won the men’s final at the French Open was in 1999, when Andre Agassi put the finishing touches on his career grand slam with a victory over Andrei Medvedev. And while it’s unlikely that the long Roland Garros drought will end come June 8,
AC Milan's Christian Pulisic will miss next month's CONCACAF Gold Cup, leading a group of notable absentees from Mauricio Pochettino's 27-man U.S. squad announced on Thursday.
Jim Courier is the first to acknowledge that Novak Djokovic has been struggling but he also highlights that the Serb had some moments this year where he looked his usual self and that's why the American tennis legend is not writing off the world No. 6 from the French Open title contention.
A 24-time Major champion, Djokovic finds himself in a tricky spot in his career. He’s on a three-match losing streak for the second time this season and has zero clay wins in 2025. While he’s been open that he’s in a “new chapter”, the world No. 6 believes he can still be a Grand Slam candidate ahead of Roland Garros.