Tennis-Medvedev rules out skipping French Open despite cruel deja vu


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

PARIS, May 26 (Reuters) - ⁠Daniil Medvedev was left to digest a seventh first-round defeat in 10 appearances ⁠at the French Open after a bruising five-set loss to Australian Adam ‌Walton on Tuesday, but the Russian said he would never consider skipping the claycourt Grand Slam.

Medvedev fell to a topsy-turvy 6-2 1-6 6-1 1-6 6-4 defeat on Court Suzanne Lenglen and added that the latest setback ​in Paris might however force him to reconsider his ⁠schedule a week before the claycourt ⁠major.

"I want to play Grand Slams. I know that I'm in good shape and I ⁠can ‌play well at Roland Garros, as well. I can. It's just tougher for me ... I'll always come here," Medvedev said.

"Maybe I should consider playing a tournament ⁠before. I usually don't do (that) before Grand Slams, but when ​it doesn't work, why ‌not?

"So that's the only thing I will consider next year."

Medvedev's defeat also extended ⁠his struggles on ​the biggest stage following three opening exits at the majors last year, but he said he was still good enough to compete, even if the game has changed in recent years.

Players like ⁠Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner have led the way ​to show greater baseline intensity and physicality, making it harder for others like Medvedev to find their rhythm, especially on slower claycourts.

"I think I'm still usually good in Grand Slams," ⁠Medvedev insisted.

"Yes I can lose (in the) first round, but I don't think I've lost the ability to perform in Grand Slams. So I do think it can come back any moment, meaning at Wimbledon, for example.

"But again, if we talk in general about all ​the four Grand Slams, I think if we compared all ⁠four Grand Slams to five years ago, the game is different in these Grand Slams, and ​I don't think it suits me well.

"It's very tough ‌for me to get the rhythm going. ​First round is the toughest one, and once I get through it, maybe I can do better."

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Paris, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tennis

Tennis-No repeat for injury-ravaged Boisson as French women disappoint at Roland Garros
Tennis-Sabalenka, Osaka bring style to Paris but Medvedev comes undone
Tennis-Teenager Kouame becomes youngest male Grand Slam match-winner in 17 years
Tennis-Osaka ramps up fashion stakes at French Open before first-round win
Tennis-Gauff powers past Townsend to begin Paris title defence
Tennis-De Minaur faces rising star Blockx at French Open, Svitolina downplays title talk
Tennis-Medvedev stunned by wildcard Walton in French Open first round
Tennis-Quick and effective: Sabalenka races into French Open second round
Tennis-Monfils aims to emulate Ronaldo, LeBron after Roland Garros farewell
French showman Monfils bids adieu to Roland Garros after loss to Gaston

Others Also Read