A debate has started over the name of a 135-year-old tennis Grand Slam.
On Tuesday, the official X account of the ongoing Grand Slam in Paris tweeted a popular meme showing the rapper Drake shooing away âFrench Openâ and pointing approvingly at âRoland-Garros.â The tournament captioned the photo: âFor everyone asking.âÂ
The post has nearly 700,000 views and 33,000 likes.
While Roland-Garros is the name favored by the tournament itself, English speakers and mediaâparticularly in the United States and Englandâuse âFrench Open.â
The three other Grand Slam tournamentsâthe Australian Open, Wimbledon, and US Openâare all played in English-speaking countries.Â
Many players refer to the tournament as Roland-Garros. Menâs world No. 1 Jannik Sinner called it âRoland-Garrosâ during his pre-tournament media availability last week. Carlos Alcaraz, the 2025 menâs singles champion, called it âRoland Garrosâ in an Instagram post last month announcing that he would not be participating in the event. (Alcaraz did not add a hyphen, though events or places named after a person are hyphenated in French.)
Last year, American Coco Gauff, the 2025 womenâs singles champion, called herself the âfrench open championâ on Instagram.Â
According to the tournamentâs website, the tournament started in 1891 and was called the âFrench Clay-Court Championships.â In 1925, it allowed the participation of international players âand the âFrench Openâ was born.â Three years later, the stadium was renamed after French fighter pilot Roland Garros, who died in 1918 in World War I. The tournamentâs name followed.
Warner Bros. Discovery started broadcasting the Grand Slam in the United States last year, taking over for NBC and the Tennis Channel. WBD has had the tournamentâs broadcasting rights across several European countries since 1989 (not including France).
Its TNT broadcasts have referred to the tournament as âRoland-Garros.â
A spokesperson for Warner Bros. Discovery told Front Office Sports that the online discourse about the tournamentâs name has been âamusing to watch.â The company said in a statement that it has always used âRoland-Garrosâ to refer to the Grand Slam:
âWe have never marketed the event anything other than Roland-Garros. Regardless of whoever had the media rights in the US prior to last year, we have been consistent on this for many decades. And, as Roland-Garros officials have indicatedâŠit is the name of the event.âÂ
Asked whether âFrench Openâ was considered an acceptable way of referring to the Grand Slam, WBD deferred to the French Tennis Federation, the tournamentâs organizers.Â
The federation did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Â
The post Why Roland-Garros Is Correcting Everyone About Its Name Now appeared first on Front Office Sports.
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