Tennis-Sabalenka ousted by Shnaider as shocks continue to rock French Open


Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka reacts during her quarter final match against Russia's Diana Shnaider, Tennis, French Open, Roland Garros, Paris, France, June 3, 2026. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

PARIS, June 3 (Reuters) - Aryna Sabalenka was dumped out ⁠of the French Open on a windy Wednesday at Roland Garros as Diana Shnaider staged an inspired comeback to beat the world number one 3-6 7-5 ⁠6-0 and further blow open the draw heading into the semi-finals.

In a tournament that has already witnessed several shocks, including premature exits for defending ‌champion Coco Gauff and four-times winner Iga Swiatek, Sabalenka's collapse was another unexpected jolt through the field.

With world number one Jannik Sinner and 24-times major winner Novak Djokovic also early casualties, it means that for the first time since the 1977 edition of Roland Garros there will be no Grand Slam champion featuring in the semi-finals of a major.

"No thoughts, no emotions. I just want to quit tennis now," a downbeat Sabalenka told ​reporters after her defeat. "We'll see in a few days. Hopefully I'll get back on track mentally.

"I don't ⁠know when was the last time that happened to me that ⁠I lost 10 games in a row. I guess mentally I got into very deep, dark hole over there, and I just couldn't get back on track mentally."

While Sabalenka ⁠was ‌left to rue her missed chances after going a set and a break up and being two points from winning the match, Shnaider said she had taken lessons from the Belarusian's struggles in last year's wind-hit final.

Sabalenka produced a litany of unforced errors in similarly tricky conditions 12 months ago to lose the title clash.

"Of course ⁠I knew in the final last year ... it was super windy," Shnaider said.

"I had that thought ​in the back of my mind that she was ‌struggling with Coco last year. I was like, 'yeah, I've got to use this opportunity, I need to just adjust'.

"I was starting to step in more on ⁠her second serve, putting pressure. ​She got a couple of unforced errors here and there and the momentum was shifting a bit towards my side.

"I believed more in myself."

Shnaider will continue to believe she can progress to her maiden Grand Slam final when she takes on Polish qualifier Maja Chwalinska, who continued her Paris dream run with a 7-6(3) 6-3 victory over Russia's Anna Kalinskaya.

Chwalinska will have the chance to step out ⁠of compatriot Swiatek's shadow and earn a much bigger windfall having already collected $870,000 for her semi-final ​run - more than she has earned during her entire career.

"I feel like for some reason, I don't process it. Like, I'm just focusing on every single match. I honestly don't feel like it's like a huge moment for me," Chwalinska said of her win.

"But definitely after the tournament finishes, I will have time to be grateful for what happened and process ⁠it as well. But for now, I'm just very happy, but I know that I need to focus on the job."

As Chwalinska focused on staying in the moment, Flavio Cobolli showed similar composure to navigate tricky conditions and surge into his maiden Grand Slam semi-final with a 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 win over fourth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime.

Cobolli, among the Italian men looking to shine in Sinner's absence, lost the opening set and came back from 1-3 down in the next when the playing conditions suddenly improved with the roof closed ​in anticipation of rain.

He blew away his Canadian opponent in style before talking about the superstitious beliefs that have helped him ⁠in his run this year in Paris, including the use of 14-times champion Rafa Nadal's preferred locker room shower stall.

"I'm a little bit (superstitious), but not crazy," the 10th seed said. "But this ​week, I'm a little bit more crazy than the others. I go same restaurant, same menu, same shower.

"Actually, ‌I think I said in the first press conference that I used the same shower ​as Rafa, because I had memories with that shower. He told me it has been his shower since 14 years.

"So the best thing I'm doing (this year) ... the shower."

He now awaits the winner of the match between fellow Italians Matteo Berrettini and Matteo Arnaldi.

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

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