Jannik Sinner is destined to add the final piece to his trophy cabinet at Roland Garros, looking to secure the career Grand Slam.
Featured Betting Sites
Imagine what you could be buying instead.
Set a deposit limit.
Champion
With no Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner winning this French Open is one of the biggest Grand Slam certainties we’ve seen since peak Rafa in his Roland Garros stranglehold.
Sinner is 16-0 on clay this year, winning Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome.
There’s no real point going through Sinner’s draw, because he’s that far ahead of anyone else in this draw that he will simply steamroll his way through to winning his first French Open, and securing the career Slam at the age of 24.
Runner Up
Missed a chunk of tennis due to injury late last year, but since returning in February he’s proven himself as a genuine top-five candidate by year’s end.
The Frenchman is 22-7 for the year, and on the clay he’s played extremely well with a 9-2 record – his losses coming against Sinner in the Semi Final of Madrid, followed by a retirement in Rome.
Fils won Barcelona in the lead-up with wins over the in-form Jodar, Musetti and Rublev – huge chance in the bottom half of the draw away from Sinner.
Semi Finalists
Has always played well at Roland Garros, reaching the Final twice and also a Semi Final appearance in 2024.
Casper Ruud is 10-3 on clay in the lead-up, reaching the Final in Rome against Sinner where he went down 6-4 6-4.
Will likely face Novak Djokovic in the Round of 16, but with Djokovic’s injury concerns and lack of tennis apparent this year, the Norwegian won’t get a better opportunity.
The second quarter is wide open and I wouldn’t be surprised to see an unknown player advance. Felix Auger-Aliassime is the top-seed, who I’m not overly convinced with on clay, while Daniil Medvedev hates the red dirt.
Vacherot enters under an injury cloud and Learner Tien isn’t a clay-courter, so I think Francisco Cerundolo has the best chance of advancing to the Semi Finals.
The Argentine is 13-7 on clay in 2026, including winning in his home country in February.
Roughies
21-year-old from Belgium, Alexander Blockx has shown plenty this year since returning from a shoulder injury sustained in qualifying of the Australian Open.
Blockx has moved to 36 in the world off the back of a 10-4 clay record, including wins over Ruud, Cerundolo, Auger-Aliassime and Cobolli.
One to watch.
That second-quarter is as weak as a quarter you’ll see at the French Open, littered with pure hard-courters and out of form seeds.
Alejandro Tabilo is a pure clay courter, and the Chilean is in form. He’s 11-7 on clay this year, and although he doesn’t have a heap of scalps with Fonseca his only big win this year, he might not need to be a giant killed in his quarter.
Could feature in the second week at a price.



























