Tennis-Medvedev stunned by wildcard Walton in French Open first round


Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 26, 2026 Russia's Daniil Medvedev in action during his first round match against Australia's Adam Walton REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS, May 26 (Reuters) - ⁠Daniil Medvedev could not avoid the French Open first‑round trapdoor as he ⁠fell 6-2 1-6 6-1 1-6 6-4 to Australian wildcard Adam Walton on ‌Tuesday in a match marked by sharp swings in momentum on the Parisian clay.

The former world number one had fallen at the first hurdle in six of his previous nine appearances at the claycourt Grand ​Slam, highlighting his uneasy relationship with Roland Garros ⁠and the sport's slowest surface.

"It's huge," ⁠Walton said of the victory in his on-court interview, adding that a win over ⁠Medvedev ‌in Cincinnati last year had given him the confidence to repeat the feat.

"I knew I could do it and I believed, so I'm just happy ⁠with my performance. I'm really excited right now."

Medvedev showed early ​signs of frustration when ‌he dropped serve and then allowed Walton to build a 4-2 lead ⁠in the opening ​set, which the 30-year-old relinquished with a forehand that sailed over the baseline.

The recovery was swift and emphatic as Medvedev regained his rhythm to wrest control by claiming the next set ⁠for the loss of only one game, but ​the sixth seed could not maintain his grip and let the third set slip away.

World number 97 Walton, who was seeking a first win over a top-10 player, surrendered the ⁠fourth set but fought on bravely in the decider to break back at 4-4, before producing a tight hold and then dismissing Medvedev for a famous victory.

"I'm pretty tired right now," Walton added.

"It was such an up-and-down match. I got off to ​a hot start, and I felt like the ebbs and ⁠flows of the match were quite large today. I'm just really proud of my ​efforts in the fifth set, to come from a ‌break down to get the win."

Up next ​for the 27-year-old is a second-round meeting with American Zachary Svajda, who beat Australian Alexei Popyrin.

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Paris; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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