And with that, I’m going to scuttle off. It’s been a thrill a minute, it truly has. Here’s what’s scheduled for the showcourts tomorrow (other than quite a lot of rain). Bye!
Court Philippe Chatrier
28-Casper Ruud (Norway) v 3-Dominic Thiem (Austria)
1-Simona Halep (Romania) v 25-Amanda Anisimova (U.S.)
Caroline Garcia (France) v 16-Elise Mertens (Belgium)
Stefano Travaglia (Italy) v 2-Rafa Nadal (Spain)
Court Suzanne Lenglen
3-Elina Svitolina (Ukraine) v 27-Ekaterina Alexandrova (Russia)
16-Stan Wawrinka (Switzerland) v Hugo Gaston (France)
6-Alexander Zverev (Germany) v Marco Cecchinato (Italy)
Katerina Siniakova (Czech Republic) v 5-Kiki Bertens (Netherlands)
Court Simonne Mathieu
Eugenie Bouchard (Canada) v Iga Swiatek (Poland)
Lorenzo Sonego (Italy) v 27-Taylor Fritz (U.S.)
Norbert Gombos (Slovakia) v 12-Diego Schwartzman (Argentina)
Martina Trevisan (Italy) v 20-Maria Sakkari (Greece)
The 34-year-old Kevin Anderson, whose ranking is currently 118, is giving the No22 seed Dusan Lajovic a bit of a scare on Court 9. Anderson leads 6-2, 6-4, 4-6, and they have just started the fourth set. The 6ft 8in Anderson has hit nine aces so far.
And while I’m quoting, here’s the 2017 champion, Jelena Ostapenko, after her brilliant win over the No2 seed, Karolina Pliskova:
It’s hard to compare because that was three years ago and I was fearless, nobody really knew me, but now players get to know me more. They know how I can play. They know how to play probably against me. Of course it’s in my memory because it’s the biggest win of my career so far, but I have to move forward and the world doesn’t stop with winning only one Grand Slam. Of course I want to achieve more and I want to be back in the top five, top 10. Step by step. That’s what I’m working on, my consistency. Still being an aggressive player, I think it can bring me a lot of wins, but consistency probably in my game is the key.
The highlights of Denis Shapovalov’s press conference after his five-hour marathon defeat to Robert Carballes Baena:
- “Scheduling is absolutely awful. After a five-hour match I have to play doubles now. It’s just like, it’s just complete trash scheduling. It’s disappointing. I mean you’re in a Grand Slam and I don’t want to sound spoiled, but you expect at least some help from the tournament to help you compete. How am I supposed to come out and play doubles now after a five-hour match?”
- “These conditions were completely stacked against me. It’s impossible to hit a winner with these balls. In my opinion, it shouldn’t be that heavy and that difficult.”
- “Honestly I think they’re not doing a good job. There’s really no bubble, especially in the second hotel, I heard. You can leave the hotel, you can go to the city, there’s no problem, there’s nobody stopping you. New York was done way better.”
The No10 seed Roberto Bautista Agut is having a jolly old time on Court 14. He’s leading Attila Balazs 6-3, 6-1, 1-0 and is a break up in the third. At 32 Balazs has never been beyond the first round of a Slam before, but it looks very much like this is where he runs out of road.
The match between Elena Rybakina, the 14th seed, and Fiona Ferro has been switched from Lenglen to Chatrier because the main court is now free. The match between Matteo Berrettini, the seventh seed, and Lloyd Harris has just started on Lenglen.
Tsitsipas has looked really excellent today. There have been some superb drop shots - one particularly good forehand drop-volley - but it has been a fine all-round performance, full of strength, technique and variety. He has duly won at an absolute canter, sending Pablo Cuevas packing 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 in 1hr 28min, just five minutes longer than Djokovic’s match a little earlier. In round three he’ll play the winner of the match between Nikola Milojevic and Aljaz Bedene, the Slovenian who briefly represented Britain a few years back. That’s just gone to a fourth-set tie-break, with Bedene ahead 6-5, 2-6, 6-1, 6-6.
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Garbine Muguruza completes a bad day for the Pliskovas by wrapping up a 6-3, 6-2 win over Kristyna. She’ll next play Danielle Collins, the American who beat the Danish qualifier Clara Tauson by a very similar scoreline (6-2, 6-3) earlier today.
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On the verge of victory dept: Kristyna Pliskova is about to join her sister on the French Open scrapheap, trailing Garbine Muguruza as she does 3-6, 2-5. And Tsitsipas is but a few dottes I’s and crossed T’s away from victory on Chatrier, leading Cuevas as he does 6-1, 6-4, 3-0 with two breaks in the third.
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Cuevas has caused Tsitsipas a few problems in the second set, and even broke his serve at one point, but the Greek has nevertheless seen it out and leads 6-1, 6-3.
Kristyna Pliskova broke to go 2-1 ahead in the first set against Muguruza. It was a while ago now, but it’ll be a pleasant memory for her to cast her mind back to, later in the day. Muguruza went on to win the first set 6-3, and it’s currently 1-1 in the second.
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Kristyna Pliskova may be ranked 69th to Karolina’s 4th, but she actually has a 5-4 record against her sister. So there have been at least five tournaments in which she has outlived her twin, the most recent in Eastbourne last year.
After the marathon opener on Lenglen the second match of four scheduled today has only just started. On Chatrier the last of four is in progress and not looking like it’ll take a great deal longer than the other three. Stefanos Tsitsipas, the No5 seed, is up against Pablo Cuevas and has cantered into a 4-0 lead in the opening set, having in the process won the last 10 points in a row.
Karolina Pliskova, the No2 seed, was upset earlier today leaving her twin sister Kristyna to carry family hopes in the tournament. She’s playing the No11 seed Garbine Muguruza. The two have never played before, but Muguruza is 8-2 down to members of the Pliskova family, if that helps. “As Kristyna Pliskova takes the stage against Muguruza, I cannot remember if there ever was a tournament where Pliskova has outlived her more celebrated twin,” writes Aditi Modi. Anyone?
In all the excitement I missed Sloane Stephens leaving the tournament with a bit of a whimper, going down 4-6, 6-4, 2-6 to Paula Badosa.
Parsing the stats for that match, Carballes Baena won precisely two more points than his opponent overall, prevailing 196-194, but Shapovalov hit more than twice as many winners (65-31) as well as getting on for three times as many unforced errors (106-42). In that mammoth 8-6 final set Carballes Baena, the victor, only hit five clean winners! In the fourth set, which to be fair he did lose 6-3, he hit only one winner! Denis Shapovalov is only 21, he’ll learn from this, but that is going to sting.
Roberto Carballes Baena beats Denis Shapovalov in extraordinary five-setter!
Remarkable scenes on Lenglen, where the No9 seed, Denis Shapovalov, serves for the match twice, fluffs it twice, serves to stay in it once and fluffs that as well! At 27, Carballes Baena had never in his life won a five-setter, but he takes this one 7-5, 6-7, 6-3, 3-6, 8-6 after precisely five hours of action! This is what he has to say about it:
It is a dream for me to win a match like this on this court. I tried to be very solid and focus on my game. Shapovalov serves very good and is very aggressive, but I think I did a very good match. It’s the first time I beat a top 10, the first time I’m in the third round of a Grand Slam, the first time I win a match in the fifth set, so I can’t be more happy.
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Leylah Annie Fernandez, the 18-year-old Canadian (she only turned 18 last month), has beaten Polona Hercog to reach the third round of a Grand Slam for the first time. Fernandez won the girl’s singles at Roland Garros last year, so clearly likes a bit of clay.
Djokovic’s match took just one hour and 23 minutes, and precisely 120 points. The Shapovalov-Carballes Baena match has featured 384 points so far, and gnarly long ones as well. As I type, in the 13th game of the fifth set, those two players have won precisely 192 points each.
Novak Djokovic eases into the third round!
Djokovic wraps up a 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 win over Berankis, and is just a class apart. He lost just five games in the first round, and another five today.
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Shapovalov has already served for the match once, at 5-4 in the final set, when he was broken to 30. And Carballes Baena earns another break-back point in this one at 30-40, but misses it. And then another, and this time Shapovalov hits a backhand wide! It’s 6-6!
On Suzanne Lenglen Denis Shapovalov is serving for the match against Roberto Carballes Baena, and a titanic encounter is approaching its conclusion. Shapovalov leads 5-7, 7-6, 3-6, 6-3, 6-5 after four hours and 48 minutes of toil, and counting. Djokovic, by contrast, is about to serve for his match after just 80 minutes.
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The hopes of Sloane Stephens seem to be crumbling like the crust of a freshly-baked baguette on Court 12, where she has been broken twice at the start of the deciding set and now teeters on the edge of disaster, trailing Paula Badosa as she does 4-6, 6-4, 0-3.
It’s crunch time in the match between Sloane Stephens and Paula Badosa on Court 12, with the American fighting back from a set down to stand as I type at complete parity, 6-4, 4-6, and about to serve at the start of the decider.
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Pablo Carreño Busta lost to Guido Pella the last time they played, in last year’s Davis Cup, but the No17 seed seems at little risk of an upset today, leading as he does 6-3, 6-2, 3-0. Also having a straightforward day is Daniel Elahi Galan, the world No153, who is playing nominative determinism’s Tennys Sandgren, the world No47, and giving him an absolute pasting. Galan leads 6-2, 6-2, 3-0.
Berankis has found a way to stall Djokovic’s progress - by calling on the physio and getting some massage courtside. He seemed to feel the small of his back beforehand. He’s 6-1, 6-2 down, and in deep trouble even without his body failing him.
Djokovic has his opponent running all over the court, trying to cling onto his serve at 4-2 down. Double break point, taken as Berankis wafts a backhand into the net. Djokovic to serve for the second set - and time for me to hand back to Simon Burnton...
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An upset in the all-German clash between the No 30 seed, Jan-Lennard Struff and qualifier Daniel Altmaier, who won in straight sets. The 22-year-old is ranked 186 in the world and making his grand slam debut here.
Dimitrov pulls away from Martin in the third set to seal a 6-4, 7-6, 6-1 win. He’s looked in decent nick so far, and will face the winner of Shapovalov v Carballes Baena in round three. That one’s gone to a decider after Shapovalov took the fourth set 6-3.
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Berankis surely needs to start the second set with a hold, if this match is not to rapidly get away from him. It’s not to be, Djokovic breaking again - but Berankis rallies, firing up his returns to earn two break points. Djokovic’s first serve is a fearsome machine today, however, and he reels off the aces to go two games up. At least some signs of hope for his opponent, though.
An email! “Why so many exclamation marks on live sports feeds! It looks pretty amateur! Maybe it shouldn’t annoy me so much! From Duncan Barioth!” Thanks, Duncan!
Djokovic wins the first set 6-1! The world No 1 is on a completely different level to his opponent, and makes it a double break with almost insulting ease. Djokovic serves it out inside 22 minutes.
Meanwhile Christian Garin and Karen Khachanov have both sealed their third-round spots inside four sets - they’ll play each other next in what looks an intriguing battle.
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Djokovic isn’t hanging about, breaking Berankis at the first time of asking and racing into a 3-0 first-set lead. Elsewhere, Shapovalov is a break up in the fourth, while Khachanov may be about to spare himself a decider - he broke Vesely to force a tie-break, which he leads 4-2.
Out on Court 12 Sloane Stephens, a finalist here just two years ago, is trailing in the first set against the world No 87, Paula Badosa.
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Here comes Novak! His second-round opponent is Ricardas Berankis, the world No 66. Djokovic has won their previous two meetings, and the plucky Lithuanian is a whopping 33-1 to cause a shock today.
Niall here, stepping in while Simon takes a break. On Simonne-Mathieu court, Grigor Dimitrov is two sets to the good against Slovakia’s Andrej Martin.
A couple of other seeds are finding things tougher: Denis Shapovalov is 2-1 down to Spain’s Roberto Carballes Baena, a tricky opponent on clay. On Court 14, Russia’s Karen Khachanov looks to be heading to a deciding set against Jiri Vesely.
Christian Garin has managed to work his way into the world’s top 20 (he’s currently 19th) and earn a handy seeding (No20), despite never getting beyond the second round of any Grand Slam ever, and that’s despite never playing anyone ranked higher than then then No18 Jack Sock (at Wimbledon in 2017) at any of them. But history beckons against the Australian Marc Polmans, a lucky loser from qualifying, today: he’s 6-7, 6-2, 7-6, 3-2 ahead, a break up in the fourth.
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Sofia Kenin beats Ana Bogdan in three sets!
The match didn’t so much slip away from Bogdan as flee from her at great pace. From 6-3, 3-3 it’s all gone horribly wrong, and she’s eventually gone down 6-3, 3-6, 2-6. It wasn’t quite as straightforward as it seems in the end, though: from 0-40 down Bogdan turned penultimate game of the match into a seven-minute mini-epic, saving those three match points to eventually hold, and then she had two break points of her own in the next game, which ended up being nearly as long (6min 33sec, since you ask). But Kenin won it, and is through to round three!
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Aryna Sabalenka has wrapped up victory over Daria Kasatkina, 7-6, 6-0. The eighth seed ended up with a 19-3 lead on winners in that second set. Kasatkina actually had more break points in the second set that Sabalenka did (six, to her opponent’s five), she just didn’t win any of them.
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The second set in the match between Aryna Sabalenka and Daria Kasatkina has been a lot more straightforward than the first. As previously mentioned, the first teetered intriguingly at 6-6, and 6-6 in the tie-break, before swinging decisively in favour of Sabalenka, the No8 seed. And the match has kept swinging in that direction ever since - Sabalenka leads 5-0 in the second set and is serving for the match. She’s 16-2 up in the winner count for this set.
Bogdan briefly hints at one more twist to the plot as she breaks Kenin to make it 1-3 in the decider, but Kenin breaks back again, a fourth successive break for her, to move two games from the win.
Sofia Kenin breaks again, and is 3-0 and two breaks to the good in the deciding set. Ana Bogdan has continued to leave drop shots, of which there are an increasing number, and is looking rather forlorn.
Nothing is working now for Bogdan. At 30-0 on the Kenin serve she dominates the point, has a pretty easy volley to seal it, sends it limply to midcourt and loses it instead. Kenin wins the next point with a drop shot that Bogdan makes no attempt to return.
There has been a massive and possibly decisive swing of the form pendulum on Chatrier, where Kenin reeled off a run of 10 points out of a possible 11 to wrap up the second set and earn three break points at the start of the third. She saves one, but then hits a forehand long and is down a break!
Kenin powers a pinpoint serve down the middle to hold and level the match at a set apiece, 3-6, 6-3!
Kenin has broken again! She’s now serving for the second set at 5-3.
The No8 seed, Aryna Sabalenka, has just secured the first set against Daria Kasatkina, the world No71 who was a quarter-finalist here a couple of years ago. I turned over all excited with the set beautifully poised 6-6, and 6-6 in the tie-break. Sabalenka, the spoilsport, won the next two points.
Bogdan breaks straight back! A couple of phenomenal forehand winners from the Romanian there, and having been broken to love she breaks back similarly to curtail the Kenin comeback.
Ana Bogdan has just served a double fault on break point, and Sofia Kenin, who has suddenly discovered her big bulging bag of phenomenal winners and is now spraying them around the court like seed on a freshly-ploughed field (or something) leads 3-1 in the second set.
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According to the ATP the Germans Jan-Lennard Struff and Daniel Altmaier have never played before, so there’s history being made on Court 13. Altmaier is the world No186 and playing in the main draw of a Grand Slam for the first time, Struff is the No30 seed, eight years older, one inch taller (at 6ft 4in) and a whole lot better. Except perhaps not, because he’s just lost the first set 6-3.
Ana Bogdan takes the first set against Sofia Kenin 6-3! Kenin hit 16 unforced errors in the opening set, to Bogdan’s four, which pretty much tells the story. Bogdan won the last three games of the set to 30, 30 and 15, breaking in the middle of those three games, when at 0-15 down Kenin hit two successive double faults.
Unfortunate facial expression of the day:
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One seed who has enjoyed a drama-free day is the No7 Petra Kvitova, who eased into round three with a drama-free 6-3, 6-3 win over Jasmine Paolini.
Um, scratch that. Kenin has broken back and then held, and it’s back to 2-2.
New seed, same problem on Chatrier, where the No4 seed Sofia Kenin is struggling at the start against Ana Bogdan. The world No93 has started fabulously, and though she missed a couple of break points in the second game it was alright because she had three of them, and snaffled the third. It’s 2-0 to the Romanian, obviously very early stages.
After a couple of late twists - Shapovalov broke back to make it 5-5, and was immediately rebroken - Roberto Carballes Baena has wrapped up the first set, 7-5. There is a lot of luminous yellow being worn by both of them.
Ostapenko reacts to her win. Marion Bartoli has often been doing the post-match interviewing on Chatrier, but as Ostapenko’s coach she was probably a little overexcited.
In the beginning it was tough. I just knew I had to serve well and be aggressive when I can. I was trying to focus, try to be aggressive but not miss too many, because obviously I had to play the best tennis I can play to beat her.
Jelena Ostapenko dumps out No2 seed Karolina Pliskova 6-4, 6-2!
A fabulous performance from Ostapenko, the 2017 champion now ranked No43, full of aggression, variety and plenty of skill from the very start, and Pliskova had no answers!
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Ostapenko earns a couple of break points. Pliskova saves the first with a fantastic crosscourt forehand, but Ostapenko wins the second with a down-the-line return. She’s 5-2 up, and will serve for the match, twice if necessary!
After a shade over five minutes, three deuces and one break point Pliskova holds, and is thus down by only a single break in the second set. Ostapenko is 6-4, 3-2 up, but was close to what would surely have been a decisive breakthrough there.
Karen Khachanov, the Russian 15th seed, isn’t hanging around on Court 14 - he’s 5-1 up against Jiri Vesely, who is serving to stay in the first set.
Ostapenko wraps up the first set 6-4, and then breaks in the first game of the second set. Pliskova is in a whole heap of trouble here. Ostapenko is having particular joy against Pliskova’s second serve, and is seeing quite a lot of it.
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No such trouble for Petra Kvitova, the No7 seed, who has cantered to a 5-1 first-set lead over Jasmine Paolini. There was some encouragement for the Italian in the way she fought back from 0-40 down in the most recent game, saving three break points to bring it to deuce, but also some discouragement because she lost it anyway.
A couple more breaks of serve on Chatrier, and Ostapenko thus leads 4-3. On Lenglen another seed is struggling a bit in the early stages: Denis Shapovalov has been broken by Roberto Carballes Baena, the Spaniard leading 2-1 in the first set.
Marc Polmans, the 23-year-old Australian playing in his first French Open, is having a lovely time on Court 9 against the No20 seed Christian Garin - he’s won the first three games, including one break, and has a surely unsustainable first-serve percentage of 93%.
Ostapenko holds serve! To 15 as well. Easy. And then Pliskova holds to 30! Remarkable scenes.
Pliskova instantly breaks back, and then Ostapenko breaks again. The Latvian leads 2-1, and there hasn’t been a service hold yet. In her first two service games Pliskova has won one of six points on her own first serve, so I suppose it’s just as well she’s only landed 38% of her first serves.
Pliskova is broken to love in the opening game of her match! Well, she breaks herself, to be more accurate: there’s one double fault and three unforced errors.
Hello world!
Today features Novak Djokovic’s 33rd match of 2020 (he has won 31 of the previous 32), against one of his 31 previous victims, Ricardas Berankis, beaten 7-6, 6-4 in Cincinatti back in August. First, though, former world No5 Jelena Ostapenko, now down at No43 and thus unseeded, plays the No2 seed Karolina Pliskova to start proceedings on Chatrier, while on Lenglen the ninth seed, Denis Shapovalov, plays Roberto Carballés Baena, a 27-year-old Spaniard who has never been past the second round of a Grand Slam, and on Simonne Mathieu Petra Kvitova plays the Italian world No94 Jasmine Paolini, whose win over Aliona Bolsova in the first round was her first ever victory at a Grand Slam, for the very first time.
There is a bit of lingering moisture in the air after overnight rainfall, but it isn’t delaying the start of play and we seem unlikely to be bothered by rain today (tomorrow’s forecast is not so encouraging). Today’s order of play, with action on all courts starting at 10am BST:
Court Philippe Chatrier
Jelena Ostapenko (Lat) v (2) Karolina Pliskova (Cze)
Ana Bogdan (Rom) v (4) Sofia Kenin (USA)
(1) Novak Djokovic (Ser) v Ricardas Berankis (Lit)
Pablo Cuevas (Uru) v (5) Stefanos Tsitsipas (Gre)
Court Suzanne Lenglen
(9) Denis Shapovalov (Can) v Roberto Carballes Baena (Spa)
Kristyna Pliskova (Cze) v (11) Garbine Muguruza (Spa)
Lloyd George Harris (Rsa) v (7) Matteo Berrettini (Ita)
(14) Elena Rybakina (Kaz) v Fiona Ferro (Fra)
Court Simonne Mathieu
(7) Petra Kvitova (Cze) v Jasmine Paolini (Ita)
Andrej Martin (Svk) v (18) Grigor Dimitrov (Bul)
Alize Cornet (Fra) v Shuai Zhang (Chn)
Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (Spa) v (13) Andrey Rublev (Rus)
Court 2: Bernarda Pera (USA) & Renata Voracova (Cze) v (7) Shuko Aoyama (Jpn) & Ena Shibahara (Jpn), (11) John Peers (Aus) & Michael Venus (Nzl) v Miomir Kecmanovic (Ser) & Casper Ruud (Nor), Aubane Droguet (Fra) & Selena Janicijevic (Fra) v (16) Cori Gauff (USA) & Catherine McNally (USA)
Court 3: (1) Su-Wei Hsieh (Tpe) & Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (Cze) v Maria Sanchez (USA) & Astra Sharma (Aus), Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (Svk) & Katarina Zavatska (Ukr) v Kaitlyn Christian (USA) & Giuliana Olmos (Mex), Marta Kostyuk (Ukr) & Aliaksandra Sasnovich (Blr) v (11) Lucie Hradecka (Cze) & Andreja Klepac (Slo), Ellen Perez (Aus) & Storm Sanders (Aus) v (14) Alexa Guarachi (Chi) & Desirae Krawczyk (USA)
Court 4: Marcos Giron (USA) v Thiago Moura Monteiro (Bra), (8) Kevin Krawietz (Ger) & Andreas Mies (Ger) v Federico Coria (Arg) & Diego Sebastian Schwartzman (Arg), Patricia Maria Tig (Rom) v Christina McHale (USA), Andrea Petkovic (Ger) & Yanina Wickmayer (Bel) v Cornelia Lister (Swe) & Shelby Rogers (USA)
Court 5: (10) Hayley Carter (USA) & Luisa Stefani (Bra) v Aliona Bolsova (Spa) & Ulrikke Eikeri (Nor), Polona Hercog (Slo) v Leylah Annie Fernandez (Can), Irina Bara (Rom) v Alison Van Uytvanck (Bel), Adrian Mannarino (Fra) & Benoit Paire (Fra) v Benjamin Bonzi (Fra) & Antoine Hoang (Fra), Nicholas Monroe (USA) & Tommy Paul (USA) v (4) Lukasz Kubot (Pol) & Marcelo Melo (Bra)
Court 7: Clara Tauson (Den) v Danielle Collins (USA), (8) Aryna Sabalenka (Blr) v Daria Kasatkina (Rus), Guido Pella (Arg) v (17) Pablo Carreno-Busta (Spa), Rohan Bopanna (Ind) & Denis Shapovalov (Can) v Vasek Pospisil (Can) & Jack Sock (USA)
Court 9: (20) Christian Garin (Chi) v Marc Polmans (Aus), Nao Hibino (Jpn) v (30) Ons Jabeur (Tun), (22) Dusan Lajovic (Ser) v Kevin Anderson (Rsa), Lesley Kerkhove (Ned) & Bibiane Schoofs (Ned) v Lauren Davis (USA) & Sabrina Santamaria (USA)
Court 10: Anna-Lena Friedsam (Ger) & Katarina Srebotnik (Slo) v Jennifer Brady (USA) & Caroline Dolehide (USA), Ekaterina Alexandrova (Rus) & Oksana Kalashnikova (Geo) v Elsa Jacquemot (Fra) & Elixane Lechemia (Fra), Nikola Milojevic (Ser) v Aljaz Bedene (Slo), (3) Elise Mertens (Bel) & Aryna Sabalenka (Blr) v Irina-Camelia Begu (Rom) & Raluca Olaru (Rom)
Court 11: Kirsten Flipkens (Bel) & Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (Rus) v Kateryna Bondarenko (Ukr) & Sharon Fichman (Can), Nicole Melichar (USA) & Iga Swiatek (Pol) v Xenia Knoll (Swi) & Danka Kovinic (Mne), Daniel Elahi Galan (Col) v Tennys Sandgren (USA), Clara Burel (Fra) & Jessika Ponchet (Fra) v (4) Barbora Krejcikova (Cze) & Katerina Siniakova (Cze), Simone Bolelli (Ita) & Maximo Gonzalez (Arg) v (15) Jurgen Melzer (Aut) & Edouard Roger-Vasselin (Fra)
Court 12: Marton Fucsovics (Hun) v Albert Ramos-Vinolas (Spa), (29) Sloane Stephens (USA) v Paula Badosa Gibert (Spa), (13) Petra Martic (Cro) v Polina Kudermetova (Rus), Daniel Evans (Gbr) & Hubert Hurkacz (Pol) v (2) Marcel Granollers (Spa) & Horacio Zeballos (Arg), (13) Jamie Murray (Gbr) & Neal Skupski (Gbr) v Manuel Guinard (Fra) & Arthur Rinderknech (Fra)
Court 13: Tessah Andrianjafitrimo (Fra) & Chloe Paquet (Fra) v Miyu Kato (Jpn) & Tamara Zidansek (Slo), (30) Jan-Lennard Struff (Ger) v Daniel Altmaier (Ger), Laura Siegemund (Ger) v Julia Goerges (Ger), (12) Jean-Julien Rojer (Ned) & Horia Tecau (Rom) v Christian Garin (Chi) & Pedro Martinez Portero (Spa)
Court 14: Jiri Vesely (Cze) v (15) Karen Khachanov (Rus), Kaja Juvan (Slo) v Clara Burel (Fra), (10) Roberto Bautista Agut (Spa) v Attila Balazs (Hun), Anna Kalinskaya (Rus) & Yulia Putintseva (Kaz) v (2) Timea Babos (Hun) & Kristina Mladenovic (Fra)
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