Tennis-Teenager Kouame becomes youngest male Grand Slam match-winner in 17 years


Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - May 26, 2026 France's Moise Kouame celebrates after winning his first round match against Croatia's Marin Cilic REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

PARIS, May 26 (Reuters) - French ⁠teenager Moise Kouame announced himself on the Grand Slam stage in emphatic fashion on Tuesday, beating ⁠former U.S. Open champion Marin Cilic 7-6(4) 6-2 6-1 at the French Open to become ‌the youngest man to win a major main-draw match in 17 years.

Handed a wildcard by organisers, the 17-year-old Frenchman looked entirely unfazed on Court Simonne Mathieu in the first-round match as he made his Grand Slam debut against a player 20 years his ​senior and a former world number three.

Cilic, the 2014 U.S. Open ⁠champion and a Roland Garros semi-finalist in ⁠2022, arrived in Paris ranked 46th in the world but was outplayed by the fearless teenager, whose speed ⁠in ‌defence and deft drop shots repeatedly drew applause from the crowd.

Ranked 318th, Kouame edged a tense opening set in a tiebreak after saving two set points before taking control of the match.

“It wasn’t ⁠easy. I always try to stay in the present moment and ​not think too much about ‌the score. Today I managed to do that really well,” Kouame said on court.

Kouame did not ⁠concede a break ​of serve throughout the contest as he sealed victory in straight sets.

At 17 years and two months old, Kouame became the youngest player to win a Grand Slam match since Australia’s Bernard Tomic reached the 2009 Australian Open second round ⁠at the age of 16.

He is also the youngest player ​to advance past the first round at Roland Garros since Romania’s Dinu Pescariu achieved the feat in 1991 at 17 years and one month old.

“It’s a lot of emotion, it’s exceptional,” Kouame said. “Coming into this tournament, I didn’t ⁠really know what to expect. The team and I worked hard to be as ready as possible.”

The teenager, coached by former French player Richard Gasquet, claimed only the second main-tour win of his career after earning his first at the Miami Masters in March.

He will next face Paraguay's Adolfo Daniel Vallejo who advanced after ​20th seed Cameron Norrie retired injured.

Kouame’s breakthrough run caps a rapid rise ⁠this season.

The Frenchman has won three ITF titles — the third tier of professional tennis — and received several wildcards ​on the main circuit, including at the Miami and Monte Carlo ‌Masters.

“All the experience I gained in Miami and Monte Carlo ​probably helped me a little,” Kouame told reporters. “Technically, I felt pretty calm. I knew I was ready and I felt good mentally and physically.”

(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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