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Weâre in the quarterfinal stages of the 2026 French Open, and this event has been quite the ride for fans and bettors alike.
With a massive wave of opening-week upsets culminating in Iga Swiatekâs shocking exit, the women’s draw is completely up for grabs, while the men’s side guarantees a brand-new Grand Slam champion.
Elina Svitolina is undervalued heading into her Ukrainian Derby with red-hot Marta Kostyuk, while Iâm expecting a long war between Next Gen big guns Joao Fonseca and Jakub Mensik.
Read on for our French Open predictions and free tennis picks for Tuesday, June 2.
Check out our full 2026 French Open betting picks below, including our favorite play of the day, information on Stade Roland Garros, and more.
Top French Open predictions for Friday, May 29
Phil Naessens French Open predictions for Tuesday, June 2.Â
Fonseca vs. Mensik Over 36.5 games (-110)
The market overreaction to Joao Fonsecaâs high-profile upsets over Djokovic and Ruud has created a massive pricing error in Paris.Â
While Fonseca holds a slight clay-court service edge, Jakub Mensikâs 1.06 dominance ratio and flawless 5-0 tiebreak record prove this quarterfinal is a dead-heat pick ‘em.
Both teenagers possess explosive weaponry but suffer major mid-match concentration lapses, making a long 4-to-5 set war on slow red clay inevitable.Â
Back the Over (36.5) and play that to -130.Â
Svitolina vs. Kostyuk Svitolina moneyline (+117)
The market is practically begging you to buy into Marta Kostyuk after she dismantled Iga Swiatek on her birthday.Â
Kostyuk’s 16-0 clay streak and Madrid title are impressive, but a 55% implied price tag overlooks Elina Svitolina’s 86% clay win rate, 1.14 Dominance Ratio, and 47.7% return points won.Â
She dispatched Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, and Elena Rybakina in Rome. Svitolina’s tactical floor is higher than the market dictates.Â
Play Svitolina down to even money (+100).
đ French Open odds: Favorites & full field
The main draw of the French Open, for Men’s and Women’s singles, is underway and will be played at Roland Garros from Sunday, May 24, through Sunday, June 7. Both tournaments feature 128 competitors, playing in a single-elimination tournament.
Men’s Draw
| Player | |
|---|---|
| Alexander Zverev | +138 |
| Joao Fonseca | +426 |
| Flavio Cobolli | +567 |
| Rafael Jodar | +809 |
| Felix Auger-Aliassime | +1150 |
Women’s draw
| Player | |
|---|---|
| Aryna Sabalenka | +127 |
| Mirra Andreeva | +488 |
| Marta Kostyuk | +488 |
| Elina Svitolina | +809 |
| Anna Kalinskaya | +1900 |
Percentages courtesy of Kalshi.
Kalshi is a regulated financial exchange where you trade on real-world event outcomes. Instead of traditional odds, prices are listed as percentages (0-100%), representing the marketâs estimated probability of an event occurring.
Check out our expanded French Open odds.
French Open outright picks card
Luc LeBlanc’s outright picks
- Outright: Mirra Andreeva (+1150): Andreeva paces the WTA Tour with 15 clay court wins in 2026, with her only losses coming to fellow contenders in Coco Gauff, Elena Rybakina, and Marta Kostyuk. She picked up a clay title in Linz and reached the Madrid WTA 1000 Final in April. The 19-year-old already has two WTA 1000s to her name.
French Open long shots for 2026
Here are our best French Open long-shot predictions this year:
Best long-shot bet: Marta Kostyuk (+3233)
Pick by: Luc LeBlanc
Kostyuk is a spotless 11-0 on clay in 2026, picking up her first WTA 1000 in Madrid.
The 23-year-old has only dropped three sets on the surface this year and has beaten top-tier players such as Jessica Pegula, Mirra Andreeva, and Linda Noskova in straights. She opted to skip Rome after a dominant Madrid showing, carrying her undefeated clay record right into Roland-Garros.
- Surface fit: Kostyuk’s aggressive tendencies carry some risk, but she makes up for it with her intense power and comfort playing from deep on the baseline.
- Recent form: Kostyuk enters Roland-Garros a perfect 11-0 on clay, capturing her first career WTA 1000 title.
- Key stat: Her 60.6% of return games won on clay this year paces the Tour… by a mile.
đŸ French Open 2026: Key takeaways
- Roland-Garros: Roland-Garros stands apart from the other Grand Slams because its slow clay courts reward patience, endurance, movement, and point construction far more than raw power or big serving.
- Weather: Saturday will be another scorcher, but temperatures are expected to drop on Sunday, with rain in the forecast during the second week.Â
- No Carlos Alcaraz: The two-time defending champion is out due to a wrist injury, leaving Jannik Sinner the clear favorite to win his first French Open.
Surface breakdown: Legendary Roland-Garros clay
The Roland-Garros terre battue remains one of the slowest graded Grand Slam events on the calendar, and that changes almost everything from a betting perspective.Â
Big servers lose some of their free points, rallies get longer, and elite movement becomes critical over two weeks. Players who can defend, slide comfortably, return serve, and create heavy topspin usually have the biggest edge in Paris.
Fitness also becomes a major factor because long five-set matches can completely wear players down by the second week. Clay-court specialists often outperform expectations here, especially compared to faster hard-court events from earlier in the season.
Players to watch
- Men’s – Rafael Jodar: The Spanish teenager is on the rise with a 45% break of serve rate and a Marrakech title during the past 52 weeks.Â
- Women’s – Mirra Andreeva: The Russian teenager boasts a 47% break of serve rate and a title in Linz across the previous year.Â
Player profiles to target
- Elite returners: Breaking serve matters far more on clay than on faster surfaces, making strong returners extremely dangerous over long matches.
- Heavy topspin hitters: Players who create high-bouncing forehands and push opponents deep behind the baseline usually thrive in Paris.
- Durable grinders: Long rallies and physical matches reward players who can stay patient and maintain consistency for hours.
Why is Carlos Alcaraz not participating in the French Open?
The World No. 2 (and two-time defending champion) has been dealing with a right wrist injury suffered in mid-April during the first round of the Barcelona Open. He has not participated in any events since then and has already withdrawn from the 2026 Wimbledon tournament as well.
Described as an inflammation of the wrist tendon sheath, there are some concerns that the injury could cause him to miss the entirety of the season â and also is why Alcaraz is being extremely cautious with his recovery.
Odds movement & market notes
The womenâs French Open futures market has stayed far more competitive heading into Roland-Garros. Iga ĆwiÄ tek and Aryna Sabalenka have traded momentum throughout the clay season, with both players seeing strong market support after deep runs in Madrid and Rome.
Elena Rybakina remains a dangerous outsider, but her odds have fluctuated with fitness concerns and inconsistent clay results. Overall, bettors still view the womenâs draw as relatively open compared to the menâs side.
The menâs French Open outright is wide open now, following Jannik Sinner’s stunning upset in Round 2, combined with Carlos Alcaraz opting out.
Alexander Zverev has moved into the clear favorite position, with Novak Djokovic (in search of career Grand Slam No. 25), Casper Ruud, and Rafael Jodar all trading at shorter than a 10/1 price now.
How to watch the 2026 French Open
How to watch:
- Main television broadcast: TNT
- Court hopping coverage: truTV
- Streaming: HBO Max
French Open 2026 betting FAQ
Who are the 2026 French Open favorites?
World No. 1 Jannik Sinner is favored on the Men’s side, while four-time French Open champ Iga Swiatek is favored in the Women’s draw.
When is the 2026 French Open?
The main draw of the 2026 French Open will be played from Sunday, May 24, to Sunday, June 7.
Where will the 2026 French Open be played?
The 2026 French Open will be played at Stade Roland Garros in Paris, France.
Are French Open odds the same across all sportsbooks?
You’ll see slight to significant variations in prices across prediction markets (and regulated sportsbooks) for the French Open.
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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