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Updated May 30, 2026 · 23:35
Sports World News Updated May 30, 2026

Svajda Stuns Cerundolo in Five Sets at French Open

Zachary Svajda, ranked 85th, upset 25th seed Francisco Cerundolo 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3 to reach the French Open fourth round for the first time. The 23-year-old American dedicated the emotional win to his late father Tom, who passed away last October. Svajda will next face 10th seed Flavio Cobolli, who defeated Learner Tien in straight sets. Cobolli has reached the fourth round at a Grand Slam for the second time after his Wimbledon quarter-final run.

French Open: World No. 85 Svajda upsets Cerundolo, sets Cobolli clash in fourth round

Paris, May 30

Zachary Svajda, the No. 85 player in the ATP Rankings, continued to tread new ground on his main-draw debut at the French Open, stunning 25th seed Francisco Cerundolo in a pulsating five-setter to reach the fourth round at a major for the first time at Stade Roland Garros on Saturday.

The 23-year-old Svajda halted a stirring comeback bid from Cerundolo to earn an emotional 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3 victory. The American, whose father Tom passed away last October after a battle with cancer, pointed to the sky after upsetting World No. 26 Cerundolo across three hours and three minutes on Court 14.

Having established a two-set lead, Svajda appeared to have lost control of his clash with Cerundolo as the Argentine roared back into contention. But he broke Cerundolo's serve twice early in the deciding set to establish a 4-1 lead.

As he served for the match at 5-3, Svajda let slip two match points from 40/15 and was soon a break point down, but he saved it with an ace down the T and made no mistake with his third match point. He now leads Cerundolo 2-1 in the pair's ATP head-to-head series, having also upset the Argentine in Winston-Salem in 2024.

By reaching the fourth round, Svajda has already ensured he will hit a new career high in the ATP Rankings after Roland Garros: He is currently up 26 spots to No. 59 in the ATP Live Rankings. Standing between Svajda and a quarter-final spot in Paris will be the 10th seed, Flavio Cobolli. Italy's Cobolli earlier raced past 18th seed Learner Tien 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 to snap the American's six-match winning streak.

Cobolli converted seven of 13 break points he earned against Tien, according to Infosys Stats, to reach the fourth round at a Grand Slam tournament for the second time (after his quarter-final run at 2025 Wimbledon). The 24-year-old World No. 14 is the fourth-highest-ranked player remaining in the draw, after Alexander Zverev, Felix Auger-Aliassime, and Andrey Rublev.

"Of course I want to think match by match," Cobolli said when asked about the relatively open Roland Garros draw. "That's the way that I want to think this week.

"I know that there are many possibilities to have a new Grand Slam champion. For sure, we [will] have a new Grand Slam champion, but I don't want to think about this. For sure, I have another tough match," he said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Aditi M

Cerundolo fought back well but Svajda's mental strength in that deciding set was incredible. Saving match points with an ace down the T - pure class! The draw is wide open now with Zverev and Rublev still there, but Cobolli looks dangerous too.

Vikram M

Cobolli's destruction of Learner Tien was brutal - 7/13 break points converted is ruthless. But let's be honest, with the top seeds falling early, this is a golden opportunity for someone like Svajda or Cobolli to make a surprise semi-final run. The new Grand Slam champion talk from Cobolli is a bit premature though! 😅

Priya S

Love watching these lower-ranked players make their mark at Slams. Svajda's story is inspiring - losing his father and then channeling that grief into his tennis. Reminds me of how Nagal and Bhambri have shown similar resilience for India. Hope Cobolli vs Svajda is a cracker!

Naveen S

Svajda's ranking jump to 59 is well-deserved, but I think Cobolli's experience at Wimbledon last year gives him the edge. The Italian played smart against Tien, didn't give him any rhythm. Still, on clay, anything can happen - ask anyone who saw Wawrinka in 2015!

Shreya B

Respect to Svajda for keeping his composure after almost losing that two-set lead. His mental game after his father's passing shows incredible strength. But I wish we saw more Indian players in these deep runs - our tennis federation needs to learn from how the US develops talent like

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