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The 2024 French Open was a Grand Slam tennis tournament that was played on outdoor clay courts. It was held at the Stade Roland Garros in Paris, France, from 26 May to 9 June 2024, comprising singles, doubles and mixed doubles play. Junior and wheelchair tournaments were also scheduled.

2024 French Open
Date26 May – 9 June 2024
Edition123rd
Category94th Grand Slam
Draw128S / 64D / 32X
Prize money53,500,000[1]
SurfaceClay
LocationParis (XVIe), France
VenueRoland Garros Stadium
Champions
Men's singles
Spain Carlos Alcaraz
Women's singles
Poland Iga Świątek
Men's doubles
El Salvador Marcelo Arévalo / Croatia Mate Pavić
Women's doubles
United States Coco Gauff / Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková
Mixed doubles
Germany Laura Siegemund / France Édouard Roger-Vasselin
Wheelchair men's singles
Japan Tokito Oda
Wheelchair women's singles
Netherlands Diede de Groot
Wheelchair quad singles
Israel Guy Sasson
Wheelchair men's doubles
United Kingdom Alfie Hewett / United Kingdom Gordon Reid
Wheelchair women's doubles
Netherlands Diede de Groot / Netherlands Aniek van Koot
Wheelchair quad doubles
Netherlands Sam Schröder / Netherlands Niels Vink Wheelchair boys' singles
Austria Maximilian Taucher
Wheelchair girls' singles
France Ksenia Chasteau
Wheelchair boys' doubles
United Kingdom Ruben Harris / Austria Maximilian Taucher
Wheelchair girls' doubles
France Ksenia Chasteau / United States Maylee Phelps
Boys' singles
United States Kaylan Bigun
Girls' singles
Czech Republic Tereza Valentová
Boys' doubles
Norway Nicolai Budkov Kjær / Austria Joel Schwärzler
Girls' doubles
Slovakia Renáta Jamrichová / Czech Republic Tereza Valentová
← 2023 · French Open · 2025 →

It was the 123rd edition of the French Open and the second Grand Slam event of 2024. The main singles draws included 16 qualifiers for men and 16 for women out of 128 players respectively. The men's singles title was won by Carlos Alcaraz, who defeated Alexander Zverev in the final to lift his third Grand Slam title. He also became the youngest male player to win a Grand Slam across three different surfaces.[2] Iga Świątek successfully defended her women's singles title by defeating Jasmine Paolini in the final. It was her fifth Grand Slam title and her third consecutive French Open trophy.[3] By doing so, she recorded a 21-match winning streak in Roland Garros, which put her fourth in the match win streaks at the tournament.

Tournament

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Court Philippe Chatrier in 2023, where the finals of the French Open take place.

The 2024 French Open was the 123rd edition of the French Open and was held at Stade Roland Garros in Paris.[4]

The tournament was run by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and was part of the 2024 ATP Tour and the 2024 WTA Tour calendars under the Grand Slam category. The tournament consisted of both men's and women's singles and doubles draws.[5]

There were singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which will be part of the Grade A category of tournaments,[6] and singles and doubles events for men's and women's wheelchair tennis players under the Grand Slam category.[7] The tournament was played on clay courts and took place over a series of 18 courts, including the three main showcourts, Court Philippe-Chatrier, Court Suzanne-Lenglen and Court Simonne-Mathieu.[8]

Singles players

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Men's singles players[9]
Champion Runner-up
Spain  Carlos Alcaraz [3] Germany  Alexander Zverev [4]
Semifinals out
Norway  Casper Ruud [7] Italy  Jannik Sinner [2]
Quarterfinals out
Serbia  Novak Djokovic [1] Australia  Alex de Minaur [11] Greece  Stefanos Tsitsipas [9] Bulgaria  Grigor Dimitrov [10]
4th round out
Argentina  Francisco Cerúndolo [23] United States  Taylor Fritz [12] Denmark  Holger Rune [13]   Daniil Medvedev [5]
Italy  Matteo Arnaldi Canada  Félix Auger-Aliassime [21] Poland  Hubert Hurkacz [8] France  Corentin Moutet
3rd round out
Italy  Lorenzo Musetti [30] United States  Tommy Paul [14] Australia  Thanasi Kokkinakis Argentina  Tomás Martín Etcheverry [28]
Netherlands  Tallon Griekspoor [26] Slovakia  Jozef Kovalík (LL) Germany  Jan-Lennard Struff Czech Republic  Tomáš Macháč
  Andrey Rublev [6] China  Zhang Zhizhen United States  Ben Shelton [15] United States  Sebastian Korda [27]
Canada  Denis Shapovalov (PR) Belgium  Zizou Bergs (Q) Austria  Sebastian Ofner   Pavel Kotov
2nd round out
Spain  Roberto Carballés Baena France  Gaël Monfils Austria  Filip Misolic (Q) Italy  Fabio Fognini
Serbia  Dušan Lajović Italy  Giulio Zeppieri (Q) France  Arthur Rinderknech Spain  Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
Belgium  David Goffin Italy  Luciano Darderi   Karen Khachanov [18] Italy  Flavio Cobolli
Spain  Jaume Munar Kazakhstan  Alexander Bublik [19] Argentina  Mariano Navone [31] Serbia  Miomir Kecmanović
Spain  Pedro Martínez France  Alexandre Müller (WC) Italy  Lorenzo Sonego Germany  Daniel Altmaier
Japan  Kei Nishikori (PR) Germany  Henri Squire (Q) South Korea  Kwon Soon-woo (PR) Netherlands  Jesper de Jong (Q)
United States  Brandon Nakashima United States  Frances Tiafoe [25] Germany  Maximilian Marterer Hungary  Fábián Marozsán
Kazakhstan  Alexander Shevchenko Argentina  Sebastián Báez [20] Switzerland  Stan Wawrinka France  Richard Gasquet (WC)
1st round out
France  Pierre-Hugues Herbert (WC) France  Constant Lestienne Brazil  Thiago Seyboth Wild Colombia  Daniel Elahi Galán
Germany  Yannick Hanfmann Finland  Otto Virtanen (LL) Netherlands  Botic van de Zandschulp Argentina  Pedro Cachín
Argentina  Federico Coria   Roman Safiullin Australia  Alexei Popyrin France  Adrian Mannarino [22]
France  Arthur Cazaux Australia  Adam Walton (WC) Monaco  Valentin Vacherot (Q) Brazil  Felipe Meligeni Alves (Q)
Spain  Rafael Nadal (PR) France  Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard (WC) Australia  Rinky Hijikata United States  Mackenzie McDonald
India  Sumit Nagal United States  Marcos Giron Serbia  Hamad Medjedovic (Q) United Kingdom  Dan Evans
United States  Alex Michelsen Spain  Roberto Bautista Agut Argentina  Román Andrés Burruchaga (Q) France  Grégoire Barrère (Q)
Spain  Pablo Carreño Busta (PR) Portugal  Nuno Borges Brazil  Thiago Monteiro (Q) Germany  Dominik Koepfer
Japan  Taro Daniel Argentina  Thiago Agustín Tirante Italy  Luca Nardi France  Arthur Fils [29]
France  Ugo Humbert [17] Australia  Aleksandar Vukic Serbia  Laslo Djere Hungary  Márton Fucsovics
France  Hugo Gaston Canada  Gabriel Diallo (Q) Australia  Max Purcell Japan  Yoshihito Nishioka
France  Harold Mayot (WC) Finland  Emil Ruusuvuori United Kingdom  Jack Draper United States  J. J. Wolf (LL)
Japan  Shintaro Mochizuki (Q) United States  Nicolas Moreno de Alboran (WC) France  Luca Van Assche Italy  Mattia Bellucci (Q)
Chile  Alejandro Tabilo [24] Australia  Jordan Thompson Kazakhstan  Mikhail Kukushkin (Q) United States  Aleksandar Kovacevic
Chile  Nicolás Jarry [16]   Aslan Karatsev France  Térence Atmane (WC) Brazil  Gustavo Heide (Q)
United Kingdom  Cameron Norrie [32] United Kingdom  Andy Murray Croatia  Borna Ćorić United States  Christopher Eubanks
Women's singles players[10]
Champion Runner-up
Poland  Iga Świątek [1] Italy  Jasmine Paolini [12]
Semifinals out
United States  Coco Gauff [3]   Mirra Andreeva
Quarterfinals out
Czech Republic  Markéta Vondroušová [5] Tunisia  Ons Jabeur [8] Kazakhstan  Elena Rybakina [4]   Aryna Sabalenka [2]
4th round out
  Anastasia Potapova Serbia  Olga Danilović (Q) Italy  Elisabetta Cocciaretto Denmark  Clara Tauson
  Elina Avanesyan Ukraine  Elina Svitolina [15] France  Varvara Gracheva United States  Emma Navarro [22]
3rd round out
Czech Republic  Marie Bouzková China  Wang Xinyu Croatia  Donna Vekić France  Chloé Paquet (WC)
Ukraine  Dayana Yastremska [30]   Liudmila Samsonova [17] United States  Sofia Kenin Canada  Leylah Fernandez [31]
China  Zheng Qinwen [7] Canada  Bianca Andreescu (PR) Romania  Ana Bogdan Belgium  Elise Mertens [25]
Romania  Irina-Camelia Begu (PR) United States  Peyton Stearns United States  Madison Keys [14] Spain  Paula Badosa
2nd round out
Japan  Naomi Osaka (PR) Croatia  Jana Fett (LL) Switzerland  Viktorija Golubic Bulgaria  Viktoriya Tomova
United States  Danielle Collins [11] Ukraine  Marta Kostyuk [18] Czech Republic  Kateřina Siniaková [32] United States  Katie Volynets (Q)
Slovenia  Tamara Zidanšek (Q) China  Wang Yafan United States  Amanda Anisimova (PR) Spain  Cristina Bucșa
Latvia  Jeļena Ostapenko [9] France  Caroline Garcia [21] China  Wang Xiyu Colombia  Camila Osorio
Germany  Tamara Korpatsch   Anna Blinkova   Anna Kalinskaya [23] United States  Hailey Baptiste (LL)
France  Diane Parry   Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova [20] Croatia  Petra Martić Netherlands  Arantxa Rus
United States  Bernarda Pera Czech Republic  Linda Nosková [27]   Victoria Azarenka [19]   Daria Kasatkina [10]
Egypt  Mayar Sherif Italy  Sara Errani (Q) Kazakhstan  Yulia Putintseva Japan  Moyuka Uchijima (Q)
1st round out
France  Léolia Jeanjean (Q) Italy  Lucia Bronzetti Spain  Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro   Veronika Kudermetova [29]
Czech Republic  Barbora Krejčíková [24]   Kamilla Rakhimova Germany  Jule Niemeier (Q)   Ekaterina Alexandrova [16]
United States  Caroline Dolehide Italy  Martina Trevisan Ukraine  Lesia Tsurenko Brazil  Laura Pigossi (Q)
Hungary  Dalma Gálfi (LL)   Diana Shnaider Serbia  Aleksandra Krunić (PR) Spain  Rebeka Masarova
  Julia Avdeeva (Q) Belgium  Alison Van Uytvanck (PR)   Maria Timofeeva Australia  Ajla Tomljanović (WC)
Poland  Magda Linette Slovakia  Rebecca Šramková (Q) Ukraine  Yuliia Starodubtseva (Q) Brazil  Beatriz Haddad Maia [13]
Romania  Jaqueline Cristian Germany  Tatjana Maria Germany  Laura Siegemund Germany  Eva Lys (Q)
France  Jessika Ponchet (WC) China  Bai Zhuoxuan Ukraine  Anhelina Kalinina United States  Sachia Vickery (WC)
France  Alizé Cornet (WC) United States  Ashlyn Krueger China  Zhu Lin Romania  Sorana Cîrstea [28]
France  Clara Burel Spain  Sara Sorribes Tormo United States  Kayla Day Australia  Daria Saville (PR)
Czech Republic  Karolína Plíšková France  Fiona Ferro (WC) France  Elsa Jacquemot (WC) Hungary  Panna Udvardy (LL)
Argentina  María Lourdes Carlé France  Kristina Mladenovic (WC) Germany  Angelique Kerber (PR) Belgium  Greet Minnen
Greece  Maria Sakkari [6] Japan  Nao Hibino Argentina  Julia Riera (Q) United Kingdom  Harriet Dart
Argentina  Nadia Podoroska United States  Emina Bektas Croatia  Lucija Ćirić Bagarić (Q) Poland  Magdalena Fręch
Mexico  Renata Zarazúa China  Yuan Yue Slovakia  Anna Karolína Schmiedlová Turkey  Zeynep Sönmez (Q)
United Kingdom  Katie Boulter [26] United States  Sloane Stephens Spain  Irene Burillo Escorihuela (Q)   Erika Andreeva

Events

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Men's singles

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The men's singles event began on 26 May with the first of seven total rounds. Thirty-two players were seeded.[11] Of those seeded players, six were defeated in the first round, notably No. 16 Nicolás Jarry[12] and No. 17 Ugo Humbert.[13] Karen Khachanov, Alexander Bublik and Sebastián Báez were the highest of the five seeded players to exit in the second round,[14][15][16] and a further seven seeded players were defeated in the third round including No. 6 Andrey Rublev,[17] No. 14 Tommy Paul and No. 15 Ben Shelton.[18] With his win over Lorenzo Musetti in the third round, Novak Djokovic equaled Roger Federer's all-time record of 369 match wins at the majors.[19] That match also marked the latest finish in tournament history, ending at 3:07 a.m. local time.[20] Daniil Medvedev, Hubert Hurkacz and Taylor Fritz were the highest of the seven seeded players who were defeated in the Round of 16.[21][22][23]

Defending champion Novak Djokovic withdrew from the quarterfinals due to a knee injury. As a result of this Casper Ruud received a walkover into the semifinals.[24] His withdrawal guaranteed a first-time champion. It also marked the first French Open final without a member of the Big Three since 2004.[25] Due to Djokovic's withdrawal, Jannik Sinner attained the ATP World No. 1 singles ranking at the end of the tournament, becoming the first Italian singles player, male or female, to claim the top spot.[26] In the quarterfinals, Sinner defeated tenth seed Grigor Dimitrov in straight sets,[27] third seed Carlos Alcaraz won over ninth seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in a rematch of the previous year's quarterfinal,[28] and fourth seed Alexander Zverev reached the semifinals with a win over 11th seed Alex de Minaur.[29]

The first semifinal was played between second seed Sinner and third seed Alcaraz. The Italian got off to a strong start after he broke Alcaraz's serve in the first game of the match[30] to win four consecutive games.[31] Even though, Alcaraz countered this by breaking Sinner's serve,[32] the second seed won the first set, 6–2.[33] In the second set, the Italian once again broke Alcaraz's opening serve,[34] but the Spaniard won four consecutive games before taking the second set 6–3 in favor.[35] In the third set, Alcaraz got the lead after breaking Sinner's serve,[36] but No. 2 broke his serve twice to take the third set 6–3.[37] In the fourth set, both players continued to hold their serves until Alcaraz broke Sinner's serve in the last game of the set to win the set and to level the match at 2–2.[38] The Spaniard won the first three games of the deciding set.[39] Alcaraz won the match in five sets.[40] He also became the youngest player to reach a Grand Slam singles final on 3 different surfaces.[41] In the second semifinal, the fourth seed, Zverev played against two times French Open finalist, Casper Ruud. Ruud got an early start after Zverev's serve, winning three games in a row,[42] before taking the first set, 6–2.[43] The German broke the seventh seed's serve twice in the second set to win it in his favor, 6–2.[44] At this point in the match, Ruud started showing signs of his fatigue due to a stomach illness.[45] Zverev won the 3rd set by 6–4 after saving a break point in the 10th game.[46] Zverev won the fourth set and the match by breaking Ruud's serve in the 1st and 7th game of the set.[47]

In the final, Alcaraz had a strong start after he broke Zverev's serve in the first game of the match,[48] however, Zverev fought back and broke Alcaraz's serve in the next game.[49] Alcaraz went on to win the first set after he broke the fourth seed's serve in the 5th and 9th game.[50] Zverev dominated in the second set, he broke Alcaraz's serve twice, in the 5th [51] and 7th[52] game of the set, winning four games consecutively.[53] In the third set, coming from behind Zverev fought off a last game challenge from the Spaniard and won the set by 7–5 in his favor after saving a break point in the 12th game.[54] Alcaraz bounced back in the 4th set, he won the first games of the set, breaking Zverev's serve twice,[55][56] eventually winning the fourth set, 6–1 after saving three break points in the final game of the set.[57] In the deciding set, Alcaraz broke the German player's serve twice to win the set, match and the tournament.[58] It was his third major title. Alcaraz became the youngest player to win a major title on three different surfaces, having already won the 2022 US Open on hardcourts and 2023 Wimbledon Championships on grass.[59]

Women's singles

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The women's singles event began on 26 May with the first of seven total rounds. Thirty-two players were seeded.[11] Seven seeded players lost in the first round, notably No. 6 Maria Sakkari,[60] No. 13 Beatriz Haddad Maia,[61] and No. 16 Ekaterina Alexandrova,[62] and 10 more fell in the second round, among them No. 9 and former champion Jeļena Ostapenko,[63] No. 10 Daria Kasatkina,[64] and No. 11 Danielle Collins.[65] In a second round match, No. 1 seeded Iga Świątek defeated former world No. 1 Naomi Osaka after saving a match point,[66] leading some publications to call the match an "instant classic".[67] Six seeded players lost in the third round, including No. 7 Zheng Qinwen.[68] Świątek's defeat of Anastasia Potapova in the fourth round, which took just 40 minutes, was the shortest match played at Roland Garros since the 1988 final between Steffi Graf and Natasha Zvereva; the 10 points won by Potapova are the fewest on record at the French Open.[69] No. 15 Elina Svitolina and No. 22 Emma Navarro were the only two seeded players to lose their matches in the fourth round.[70][71]

Mirra Andreeva was the only unseeded player to reach the quarterfinals.[72] In the quarterfinals, third seed Coco Gauff won against eight seed Ons Jabeur,[73] Defending champion Iga Świątek defeated fifth seed Markéta Vondroušová in straight sets while only losing two games.[74] No. 2 seed Aryna Sabalenka was upset by Andreeva, who won after losing the first set.[75] No. 12 Jasmine Paolini defeated fourth seed Elena Rybakina in three sets.[76] In the first semifinal, Świątek met Gauff. Świątek started off strong by breaking Gauff's serve in the first game of the match.[77] First seed would break American's serve once more[78] to win the first set, 6–2.[79] In the fourth game of the second set, Gauff broke Świątek's serve for first time in the match,[80] but the Polish player broke back in the next game,[81] went on to win three consecutive games.[82] Świątek won the match, 6–2, 6–4 to reach her reach third straight French Open final.[83] She also became the third player since 2000 to make three consecutive finals at the event, after Justine Henin (2005–2007) and Maria Sharapova (2012–2014).[84] In the second semifinal match, Jasmine Paolini played against Mirra Andreeva. Paolini was first to break the serve when she won the second service game of Andreeva.[85] Italian player won the first set, 6–3.[86] No. 12 broke Andreeva's serve in the fifth game of the second set.[87] Paolini won four consecutive games to defeat Andreeva, 6–4, 6–1 and reached her maiden major final.[88] Paolini became the third Italian woman to reach the French Open final, after Francesca Schiavone (2010, 2011) and Sara Errani (2012).[89]

In the final match, Jasmine Paolini got an early lead after she broke Swiątek's serve in the third game of the first set to lead the set by 2–1.[90] Świątek bounced back in the game by breaking Italian serve.[91] Światek won four consecutive games and broke Paolini's serve thrice back to back to win the first set by 6–2 in her favor.[92] Światek carried her strong moment into the second set as she broke No. 11's serve twice[93] in a row and won the first five games of the set (9 consecutive games in total).[94] Italian was finally able to hold her serve in the penultimate game of the match.[95] The defending champion won the set 6–1 to win her third consecutive and fourth overall French Open title.[96] Świątek only dropped one set en route to the title (also against Osaka) and became the third woman in the Open Era to win three consecutive French Open titles, after Monica Seles in 1992 and Justine Henin in 2007.[97] Additionally, Świątek became only the second woman to win the Madrid Open, the Italian Open and the French Open in the same season, after Serena Williams in 2013.[98] She became only the third player (and second woman) in the Open Era to win all of their first five Major finals, after Seles and Roger Federer.[99]

Men's doubles

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The men's doubles event were scheduled to begin on 28 May with the first of six total rounds. Sixteen teams were seeded.[11] Bad weather conditions led to an interruption in the schedule, resulting in a postponement of the doubles event, which commenced on May 29.[100] Shortly after play began, a subsequent downpour caused additional delays, and the continuation of the doubles event has been rescheduled for May 31 (after rain on May 30).[101][102] In the first round, four seeded pairs lost; the highest seeded of them was No. 5 Santiago González/Édouard Roger-Vasselin.[103] Three seeded teams lost in the second round including the defending champions and No. 4 seed, Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek.[104] In Third round, further three seeded teams lost, notably sixth-seed Kevin Krawietz/Tim Pütz.[105]

In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded pair of Marcel Granollers and Horacio Zeballos defeated Tomáš Macháč and Zhang Zhizhen in straight sets in just 65 minutes.[106] 11th seeds Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori upset third seeds Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury.[107] Second seeds Rohan Bopanna and Matthew Ebden defeated 10th seeds and previous year's finalists Sander Gillé and Joran Vliegen.[108] Ninth seeds Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić defeated Stefanos and Petros Tsitsipas in straight sets.[109] In the semifinals, Bolelli and Vavassori defeated Bopanna and Ebden in three sets, reaching their second consecutive grand slam final,[110][111] while Arévalo and Pavić ousted top seeds Granollers and Zeballos.[112] Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić defeated Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori in the final in straight sets to win their first major title as a pair.[113] It was Arévalo's second major men's doubles title and Pavić's fourth. Pavić completed a career Golden Slam with the win, having previously won the three other major championships and an Olympic gold medal.[114]

Women's doubles

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The women's doubles event were scheduled to begin on 28 May with the first of six total rounds. Sixteen teams were seeded.[11] Bad weather conditions led to an interruption in the schedule, resulting in a postponement of the doubles event, which commenced on May 29.[100] Shortly after play began, a subsequent downpour caused additional delays, and the continuation of the doubles event has been rescheduled for May 31 (after further rain on May 30).[101][102] All of the 15 seeded teams in the draw advanced into the second round. The second round saw the loss of five seeded pairs including the first seeds, Hsieh Su-wei (also the defending champion) and Elise Mertens.[115] Further six pairs fell in the third round; highest of them being No. 2 Nicole Melichar-Martinez and Ellen Perez.[116]

Four seeded pairs qualified for the quarterfinals, alongside four unseeded pairs. In the quarterfinals, unseeded pair of Marta Kostyuk and Elena-Gabriela Ruse received a walkover after their opponent Mirra Andreeva and Vera Zvonareva decided to withdraw due to Andreeva's schedule.[117] Fifth seeds Coco Gauff and Kateřina Siniaková defeated 16th seeds Miyu Kato and Nadiia Kichenok in straight sets while only losing two games.[118] No. 8 Caroline Dolehide and Desirae Krawczyk beat Giuliana Olmos and Alexandra Panova.[119] No. 11 Jasmine Paolini and Sara Errani had a straight-set win against Emma Navarro and Diana Shnaider.[120] In the semifinals, Paolini and Errani fought back from a set down to defeat the unseeded pair of Kostyuk and Ruse,[121] Like Errani and Paolini, the No. 5 seeds Gauff and Siniaková also rallied from a set down to defeat Dolehide and Krawczyk in three sets.[122] Coco Gauff and Kateřina Siniaková defeated Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini in the final in straight sets to win their first grand slam title as a pair.[123] It was Gauff's first major women's doubles title and Siniaková's eighth.[124]

Mixed doubles

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The mixed doubles event were scheduled to begin on 29 May with the first of five total rounds. Eight teams were seeded.[11] Bad weather conditions led to an interruption in the schedule, resulting in a postponement of the doubles event, which commenced on May 31.[100] Two seeded pair were knocked out in the opening round: No. 5 pair of Vera Zvonareva/Sander Gillé and No. 8 seed Bethanie Mattek-Sands/Austin Krajicek.[125] All five remaining seeds won their second round matches and advanced forward into the quarterfinals. In quarterfinals, the top seeds Ellen Perez and Matthew Ebden lost to No. 7 pair of Hsieh Su-wei and Jan Zieliński,[126] while, fourth seeds Desirae Krawczyk and Neal Skupski won against the unseeded pair of Zhang Shuai and Marcelo Arévalo in straight sets.[127] Unseeded pair Ulrikke Eikeri and Máximo González knocked out the defending champions, Miyu Kato and Tim Pütz.[128] No. 6 pair of Erin Routliffe and Michael Venus lost to second seeds, Laura Siegemund and Édouard Roger-Vasselin.[129] In the semifinals, Hsieh and Zieliński were defeated by Krawczyk and Skupski,[130] while Eikeri and González were defeated by Siegemund and Roger-Vasselin.[131] In the final, Laura Siegemund and Édouard Roger-Vasselin defeated Desirae Krawczyk and Neal Skupski to win their first major title as a pair.[132] It was the second Grand Slam mixed doubles title for Siegemund and the first for Roger-Vasselin.[133] Roger-Vasselin became the first French man to win the mixed doubles event since Fabrice Santoro in 2005.[134]

Wheelchair men's singles

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The wheelchair men's singles tournament began on 4 June with the Round of 16. The field was composed of 16 player with 4 seeded players.[11] Fourth seed Martín de la Puente lost in the first round. All of the quarterfinal matches were decided in straight sets, with top three seeds advancing. In the semifinals, No. 1 Alfie Hewett lost in three sets to Gustavo Fernández, while second seed Tokito Oda defeated unseeded Takuya Miki.[135] Oda defended his title by winning the final against Fernández in straight sets.[136]

Wheelchair women's singles

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The wheelchair women's singles tournament began on 4 June with the Round of 16. The field was composed of 16 player with 4 seeded players.[11] Third seed Jiske Griffioen was knocked in the first round. Second seed Yui Kamiji lost in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, No. 4 Aniek van Koot lost to No. 1 Diede de Groot in straight sets and Zhu Zhenzhen won her match against Momoko Ohtani that decided in the super tiebreaker. Three-time defending champion Diede de Groot defeated Zhu Zhenzhen in the final to win her 14th consecutive grand slam title.[137] De Groot completed the fivefold career Grand Slam with the win. This was also her 22nd major singles title, surpassing the record held by Esther Vergeer.[138]

Wheelchair quad singles

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The wheelchair quad singles tournament began on 5 June with the quarterfinal round. The field was composed of eight players; two-time defending champion Niels Vink and three-time finalist Sam Schröder received the top two seeds and the other six players were unseeded.[11] In the opening three players including two seeds won their matches in straight sets. In the semifinals, first seed Vink lost to Guy Sasson in straight sets, while Sam Schröder won also won his match against Donald Ramphadi in straight sets. In the final, Sasson defeated Schröder in the super tiebreaker to win his first ever grand slam title and also first Israeli player to do so.[139]

Wheelchair men's doubles

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The wheelchair men's doubles competition featured the same 16 players that contested the singles event. Both the seeded teams won their both the quarterfinals,[140] and semifinals.[141] No. 1 seeds Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid defeated second seeds Takuya Miki and Tokito Oda in straight sets to win their fifth consecutive French Open title.[142]

Wheelchair women's doubles

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As with the men's competition, the wheelchair women's doubles event featured the same 16 players as in the singles event. Two of the eight pairs were seeded: defending champions Yui Kamiji and Kgothatso Montjane received the top seed, and the second seed went to Diede de Groot and Aniek van Koot. Both these seeds won their quarterfinal and semifinal matches. In the final, de Groot and van Koot defeated defending champions Kamiji and Montjane.[143]

Wheelchair quad doubles

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The wheelchair quad doubles tournament began on 7 June with the semifinal round. The field was composed of four pairs, consisting of eight players that played the singles event.[11] Both the seeds won their semifinal matches.[144] Sam Schröder and Niels Vink won the title by defeating Andy Lapthorne and Guy Sasson in the final.[145]

Boys' singles

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Of the sixteen seeded players, only four made it through the first three rounds and into the quarterfinals: No. 1 Rei Sakamoto, No. 2 Joel Schwärzler, No. 5 Kaylan Bigun and No. 10 Petr Brunclík. Sakamoto and Brunclík lost their quarterfinal matches. In the semifinals, unseeded Tomasz Berkieta won against unseeded Lorenzo Carboni, while fifth seed Bigun defeated second seed Schwärzler after losing the first set.[146] in the final, Bigun defeated Berkieta in three sets to claim his first junior Grand Slam title.[147]

Girls' singles

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Of the sixteen seeded players, only five made it through the first three rounds and into the quarterfinals: No. 1 Renáta Jamrichová, No. 3 Laura Samson, No. 4 Tyra Caterina Grant, No. 10 Iva Jovic and No. 12 Tereza Valentová. Valentová knocked out the No. 1 seed in the quarterfinals. Valentová also won her semifinal against Grant. Third seed Samson defeated unseeded Kristina Penickova to reach the final. The all-Czech championship match was won by Tereza Valentová in straight sets.[148]

Boys' doubles

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Of the four pairs that qualified for the semifinals, two were seeded. Six seeded pairs of the original eight made it past the second round. However, two seeded pair withdrew from their quarterfinal matches, No. 6 Viktor Frydrych/Mees Röttgering and No. 7 Maxwell Exsted/Cooper Woestendick. The only seeded pair to lose their quarterfinal match was No. 3 Thomas Faurel/Luca Preda. Both the top seeds won their semifinals. The final, contested between two top seeds, No. 1 Nicolai Budkov Kjær/Joel Schwärzler and No. 2 Federico Cinà/Rei Sakamoto and was won by the former in straight sets.[149]

Girls' doubles

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Of the eight pairs that were seeded at the start of the tournament, four qualified for the semifinal round, including the top three pairs and fifth seeded pair of Emerson Jones and Vittoria Paganetti. In the semifinals, top seeds Alena Kovačková and Laura Samson were knocked out by the all-American fourth seededed team of Tyra Caterina Grant and Iva Jovic, while the fifth seeded pair was defeated by the third seeded pair of Renáta Jamrichová and Tereza Valentová. The final was won by Jamrichová and Valentová in straight sets.[150]

Wheelchair boys' singles

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  • Austria  Maximilian Taucher def. Netherlands  Ivar van Rijt, 2–6, 6–4, 7–6(10–8)

Wheelchair girls' singles

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  • France  Ksenia Chasteau def. United States  Maylee Phelps, 6–2, 6–3

Wheelchair boys' doubles

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  • United Kingdom  Ruben Harris / Austria  Maximilian Taucher def. Australia  Yassin Hill / Netherlands  Ivar van Rijt, 7–5, 6–4

Wheelchair girls' doubles

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  • France  Ksenia Chasteau / United States  Maylee Phelps def. Brazil  Vitoria Miranda / Japan  Yuma Takamuro, 3–6, 6–0, [18–16]

Champions

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Point distribution and prize money

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Point distribution

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Below is a series of tables for each competition showing the ranking points offered for each event.[151][152][153]

Senior points

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Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q Q3 Q2 Q1
Men's singles 2000 1300 800 400 200 100 50 10 30 16 8 0
Men's doubles 1200 720 360 180 90 0 N/A
Women's singles 1300 780 430 240 130 70 10 40 30 20 2
Women's doubles 10 N/A

Prize money

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The French Open total prize money for 2024 is 53,478,000, an increase of 7.82% compared to 2023.[154] The French Tennis Federation aimed to provide the best possible support for players ranked up to 250th in the world and total prize money for the qualifying rounds, now known as "Opening Week" has risen by 24.65%.

Event Winner Finalist Semifinals Quarterfinals Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q3 Q2 Q1
Singles €2,400,000 €1,200,000 €650,000 €415,000 €250,000 €158,000 €110,000 €73,000 €41,000 €28,000 €20,000
Doubles1 €590,000 €295,000 €148,000 €80,000 €43,500 €27,500 €17,500
Mixed doubles1 €122,000 €61,000 €31,000 €17,500 €10,000 €5,000
Wheelchair singles €62,000 €31,000 €20,000 €12,000 €8,500
Wheelchair doubles1 €21,000 €11,000 €8,000 €5,000
Quad wheelchair singles €62,000 €31,000 €20,000 €12,000
Quad wheelchair doubles1 €21,000 €11,000 €8,000
  • 1 Prize money for doubles is per team.

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