Andreeva Tennis: Mirra Andreeva reaches 32 wins with Roland Garros run
Mirra Andreeva kept her andreeva tennis run rolling Friday, beating Marie Bouzkova 6-4, 6-2 to reach the fourth round at Roland Garros. The No. 8 seed’s latest win was her tour-leading 32nd of the season and pushed her deeper into a Paris tournament that has already thinned out several seeded players.
Andreeva extends Paris run
Andreeva needed 1 hour, 35 minutes to finish Bouzkova and secure a fourth-round place for the third consecutive year in Paris. The result also gave her a tour-leading 18th win on clay, the kind of surface marker that fits a player who has kept stacking wins through the spring.
Friday’s match was cleaner than the scoreline suggests. Andreeva controlled the first set 6-4, then closed it out more firmly in the second, 6-2, against an opponent who had already spent three rounds trying to stay alive at Roland Garros.
Bouzkova and the top-10 test
Bouzkova exited in the third round in Paris for the third straight year, and the loss extended her 11th consecutive defeat against a top-10 opponent. That left Andreeva standing as another seed still moving through a draw that has already taken out a long list of ranked players.
The opening week in Paris had already seen 16 of the men’s seeds and 14 of the women’s seeds fail to make the third round, so Andreeva’s win avoided another early exit from the top of the women’s bracket. She also became the youngest woman to reach the Roland Garros Round of 16 in three consecutive seasons since Martina Hingis from 1997-99, with her best Grand Slam result still the semifinal run she made here in 2024.
Teichmann waits next
Jil Teichmann will be Andreeva’s next opponent after upsetting Karolina Muchova 6-1, 7-5 in 1 hour, 52 minutes. Teichmann rallied from 1-5 down in the second set, earned the ninth top-10 victory of her career and reached the Roland Garros fourth round for the second time.
That matchup brings a different profile to Andreeva’s path. Teichmann is ranked No. 170, returned to the tour in April after taking time away from competition since September last year, and has played only seven tournaments since coming back; she also reached the semifinals in Rabat last week before knocking out Muchova.
Andreeva has already answered the draw’s early pressure with a straight-sets win and another round in Paris. The next step is a lower-ranked opponent with recent momentum, and the winner keeps a place in the Roland Garros second week.