Roland Garros Quarterfinals 2025

Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025 matches for men and women

Roland Garros Quarterfinals 2025 – Alcaraz, Djokovic, Sinner, Musetti Reach the Final Four

🗓️ Matches played on 03/04.06.2025


The Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025 were everything we expected, high level tennis, no major upsets, and four names that fully earned their spots in the semifinals. Over two days of action on Court Philippe-Chatrier, the favorites stepped up, and the level of play made it clear: this year’s trophy will not be handed out easily.

Here’s a full recap, match by match of how the final four were decided.


Musetti vs Tiafoe – Patience Beats Power

The opening quarterfinal saw Lorenzo Musetti take on Frances Tiafoe. Coming in as the slight favorite, Musetti made a strong statement early, taking the first set 6–2 with clean shot-making and superior footwork.

Tiafoe, however, responded in the second set with great energy and aggressive play, winning 6–4 and leveling the match. Momentum seemed to shift, and the third set turned into a real battle — long rallies, tight holds, and rising tension.

But in the end, it was Musetti who stayed calmer under pressure, breaking Tiafoe late and taking the third set 7–5. That break completely shifted the energy. Tiafoe faded in the fourth, and Musetti closed out the match with a dominant 6–2, winning 3–1 overall.

He moves into the Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025 semifinals to face the winner of Alcaraz vs Paul.


Alcaraz vs Paul – Total Domination

This match didn’t last long — but it sure left a mark.
Carlos Alcaraz entered the court like a man on a mission, blasting through the first two sets 6–0, 6–1 in just over 50 minutes. Tommy Paul had no answers for the pace, spin, or mental intensity.

The third set was more competitive, with Paul finally settling into the match and trying to extend rallies. But it was too little, too late — Alcaraz stayed in control and closed it out 6–4, for a crushing 3–0 victory.

He now prepares for a clay-court classic against Musetti — both young, both hungry, and both in form.


Sinner vs Bublik – The Italian Machine

On Day 2 of the Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025, Jannik Sinner took on Alexander Bublik, and from the first game it was clear — this was going to be one-way traffic.

Sinner came out blazing, winning the first set 6–1 with complete dominance from the baseline. Bublik pushed harder in the second, showing glimpses of his unique shot-making and rhythm changes. He even had chances to take the lead — but Sinner was simply better at key moments, and closed the second set 7–5.

The third set? A whitewash. 6–0, as Sinner turned up the tempo and didn’t give Bublik a single window to recover.
Final score: 3–0 for Sinner, and a ticket to the semis.

Alexander Bublik jokingly told reporters before the match:
“To be fair, the guy is a robot. What do you expect of me? No chance I will win a set. I made good money this week and booked a flight to America. Boobie needs a vacation. I have always wanted to see the Grand Canyon.”

A typical Bublik moment — self-aware, sarcastic, and brutally honest.


Djokovic vs Zverev – The Comeback King Strikes Again

The most anticipated match of the quarterfinals — and it delivered.
Alexander Zverev struck first, breaking Djokovic early and holding firm to take the first set 6–4. When he went up 1:1 15–30 early in the second, it looked like the 38-year-old Serbian legend might be fading.

But then… the switch flipped.
What followed was vintage Novak Djokovic — moving like he was 20, defending every inch, attacking when it mattered.
He roared back, winning the second and third sets 6–3, 6–2, completely outplaying Zverev with consistency and control.

In the fourth set, Djokovic broke early again and never looked back. Zverev had chances, but Novak shut every door. The set ended 6–4, and with it, Djokovic reached yet another Grand Slam semifinal.


 Roland Garros Quarterfinals 2025 – Semifinal Lineup

And just like that, we have our Final Four:

  • Carlos Alcaraz vs Lorenzo Musetti
  • Jannik Sinner vs Novak Djokovic

Experience vs youth. Power vs precision. Legacy vs hunger.
The Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025 gave us the semifinals we dreamed of — now it’s time to see who takes it one step further.


Women’s Quarterfinals – Boisson Shocks the World

The Roland Garros quarterfinals 2025 weren’t just about legends on the men’s side — the women delivered plenty of excitement too. Three of the four matches went as expected, but one result shook the tennis world: Diane Parry Boisson, ranked 361st in the world, reached a Grand Slam semifinal on home soil. 

Let’s go through all four quarterfinal matchups.


 Sabalenka vs Zheng – A Test Passed

Aryna Sabalenka faced one of the most in-form players on tour — Qinwen Zheng — in what was expected to be a battle. And while the scoreline reads 7–6(3), 6–3, the match was far from easy.

Zheng came out firing and pushed Sabalenka to a tiebreak in the first, but the Belarusian held her nerve. In the second set, her power and aggression made the difference, as she controlled the pace and took the set with more ease.
Sabalenka advanced to the semifinals, awaiting the winner of Swiatek vs Svitolina.


Swiatek vs Svitolina – Statement Made

Iga Swiatek showed once again why she’s the queen of clay. From the first rally, she took charge and dominated the opening set 6–1 against a tough opponent in Elina Svitolina.

The second set was more of what we expected — long rallies, deep hitting, and tough holds. But Swiatek stayed focused in the key moments, winning it 7–5 and taking the match 2–0 overall.

That result sets up a massive semifinal showdown: Swiatek vs Sabalenka — arguably the final before the final.


 Gauff vs Keys – American Power Clash

It was an all-American quarterfinal between Coco Gauff and Madison Keys, and it delivered high-quality tennis from both ends.

Keys took the first set in a tight tiebreak, 7–6(8–6), using her flat groundstrokes to keep Gauff off-balance. But the younger American regrouped and raised her level, taking the next two sets 6–4, 6–1 with clean hitting and excellent court coverage.

Gauff moves into the semis, waiting to see who would emerge from the Cinderella run between Andreeva and Boisson.


Boisson vs Andreeva – The Story of the Tournament

This was the match that turned heads — Diane Parry Boisson, ranked 361st in the world, playing in a Roland Garros quarterfinal. On the other side stood Mirra Andreeva, the 6th seed and one of the most consistent young stars on the WTA Tour.

The match started tightly. Both players held until the tiebreak, where Boisson shocked everyone by taking it 8–6, saving set points along the way.
The second set was expected to be Andreeva’s comeback — but when the key moments came, she faltered. Errors at crucial times allowed Boisson to step up and win the second set 6–3, closing out a straight-sets win that no one saw coming.

With that, the French wildcard advanced to the semifinals of Roland Garros 2025, where she will face Coco Gauff in what will be the biggest match of her career.


Women’s Semifinals – What’s Next?

We now have two fascinating semifinal matchups:

  • Iga Swiatek vs Aryna Sabalenka – a battle of titans, and a rematch of many recent finals.
  • Coco Gauff vs Diane Boisson – experience vs the underdog story of the year.

No matter who wins, the Roland Garros https://www.rolandgarros.com/en-us/quarterfinals 2025 have shown that women’s tennis is as unpredictable and thrilling as ever. Boisson’s run is a reminder that rankings don’t always tell the whole story — especially on clay, and especially in Paris. 

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