Elina Svitolina Deserves a Major Championship

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Elina Svitolina Deserves a Major Championship

Svitolina’s journey through professional tennis spans nearly two decades, and it reads like the career of someone who absolutely should have won a Grand Slam by now. She reached a career-high WTA singles ranking of World #3, won 20 WTA Tour singles titles–including four WTA 1000 events and the 2018 WTA Finals–and reached Grand Slam semifinals at the 2026 Australian Open, Wimbledon in 2019 and 2023, and the 2019 US Open. She also won a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics, the first Olympic tennis medal Ukraine had ever earned. She has won on clay, hard court, and indoors. She has beaten the best players in the world at the biggest tournaments in the world. And she has never won a Grand Slam.

In 2026, she continued her impressive return to top-level tennis with a strong 22-7 season record, one singles title, and a return to the Top 10. At the Italian Open, she won her 20th career title, defeating three top-five players along the way, becoming only the fifth active WTA player to achieve that milestone. She came to Paris as the seventh seed, in form, healthy, and, perhaps for the first time in a long while, genuinely believing. There are not many stories in women’s tennis worth cheering harder for right now.

Svitolina’s Journey Is Fascinating

Born in Odessa, Ukraine, Svitolina started playing tennis at the age of five after watching her brother play, and at thirteen moved to Kharkiv where a local businessman spotted her at a children’s tournament and agreed to sponsor her. She won the French Open girls’ title in 2010, defeating a young Ons Jabeur in the final. The foundations were there early.

Her ascent through the WTA ranks was built on discipline, consistency and a relentless work ethic that few in the game have matched. In 2017 she won five singles titles in a single season, and the following year she won the WTA Finals, the year-end championship that brings together the eight best players in the world, which stands as arguably the most complete achievement of her career. She spent a remarkable stretch of over two hundred consecutive weeks inside the WTA Top 10. She did everything that a player at her level was supposed to do.

And then the world changed. In 2022, she was pregnant and her homeland was at war. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced her to confront something no professional athlete should have to confront mid-career: the question of whether competing in a tennis tournament even mattered while cities she knew were being bombed. She channeled her grief and her anger into purpose, donating prize money to Ukrainian relief, refusing to shake hands with Russian and Belarusian opponents, and becoming one of the most vocal and consistent advocates for her country that sport has produced.

She gave birth to her daughter in October 2022 and then returned to the Tour in 2023, making a remarkable comeback that quickly returned her to Major-level form, reaching the Wimbledon semifinal just months after becoming a mother, a feat that drew admiration from across the sporting world. In 2026, she combined a deep run at the Australian Open with a title in Rome, where she defeated several top-ranked opponents, and lifted her to third place in the WTA Race. Svitolina’s journey, at this point, has it all but she’s not done yet. One final puzzle piece is missing.

Majors Are Not Deserved But Earned

Here is the honest part. Nobody deserves a Grand Slam. The word belongs nowhere near a sport. You cannot deserve something that requires seven consecutive best-of-three matches over a fortnight against the best players in the world. You can only earn it, point by point, game by game, match by match.

Svitolina has spent the better part of twenty years earning the right to have this conversation. And at the 2026 French Open, she is earning it again, one match at a time. She dominated Tamara Korpatsch in the third round 6-2 6-3, saving seven of nine break points and hitting 28 winners. She then defeated Belinda Bencic 4-6, 6-4, 6-0 to reach the quarterfinals for the second straight year at Roland Garros.

The draw has opened around her in ways that feel almost scripted. Iga Swiatek, the four-time French Open champion, was stunned by Marta Kostyuk 7-5 6-1, her earliest exit at the tournament since 2019. Gauff, the defending champion, was also eliminated before the second week. The players who have defined this tournament for the past few years are gone. What remains is a draw that has never felt more genuinely open, and a 31-year-old Ukrainian who has been working towards exactly this kind of moment her whole career.

At Roland Garros, Svitolina now holds a 37-12 career record, which tells you that this surface and this city are not foreign territory to her. They are familiar ground. She stands between a quarterfinal with compatriot Kostyuk and a potential semifinal run that could take her where she has never been at this tournament. She described her condition heading into the latter stages as being in “a good place mentally and physically” after a season built on sustained execution rather than isolated peaks.

It will not be the end of the world if she does not win it. She has built a legacy that stands independently of any single tournament result. But she is playing the best clay of her career, the draw has thinned dramatically, and everything that this sport can offer in terms of a genuine opportunity is sitting right in front of her. Everyone watching should be willing her through it.

Allez 

The conversation around Elina Svitolina often gets drowned out by louder names and bigger television deals. She has never quite been the story the sport chose to tell, despite giving it more than almost anyone. Two decades of professionalism, 20 titles, a Bronze Medal, a comeback from maternity and from war, and a game that keeps producing deep runs at the biggest events in tennis. If Paris 2026 is the tournament where it finally all comes together, it will not have come as a gift. It will have come as the result of a career spent making herself impossible to ignore, and a city that has been waiting, maybe, to finally give her what she has long since earned.

Main Photo Credit: Susan Mullane-USA TODAY Sports

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