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Odds to Win 2023 Mens French Open
207101Carlos Alcaraz+150
207102Novak Djokovic+225
207110Holger Rune+700
207109Daniil Medvedev+800
207104Stefanos Tsitsipas+1000
207108Jannik Sinner+1100
207106Casper Ruud+1600
207105Alexander Zverev+2800
207112Andrey Rublev+4000
207129Borna Coric+5000
207107Dominic Thiem+6000
207130Alejandro Davidovich Fokina+6600
207139Botic Van De Zandschulp+6600
207113Felix Auger-Aliassime+6600
207140Jiri Lehecka+6600
207117Lorenzo Musetti+6600
207137Stan Wawrinka+6600
207121Alex De Minaur+8000
207118Cameron Norrie+8000
207136Francisco Cerundolo+8000
207123Sebastian Korda+8000
207144Dusan Lajovic+10000
207128Frances Tiafoe+10000
207126Karen Khachanov+10000
207142Lorenzo Sonego+10000
207143Tallon Griekspoor+10000
207125Taylor Fritz+10000
207120Denis Shapovalov+12500
207115Diego Schwartzman+15000
207145Fabio Fognini+15000
207122Hubert Hurkacz+15000
207146Jack Draper+15000
207114Miomir Kecmanovic+15000
207116Pablo Carreno-Busta+15000
207119Roberto Bautista-Agut+15000
207133Sebastian Baez+15000
207132Tommy Paul+15000


Odds to Win 2023 Womens French Open
207151Iga Swistek-135
207159Aryna Sabalenka+550
207160Elena Rybakina+550
207158Barbora Krejcikova+1600
207167Jelena Ostapenko+2000
207155Cori Gauff+2200
207153Ons Jabeur+2200
207173Caroline Garcia+3300
207162Daria Kasatkina+3300
207156Jessica Pegula+3300
207161Maria Sakkari+3300
207176Veronika Kudermetova+3300
207182Anastasia Potapova+4000
207184Marketa Vondrousova+4000
207185Beatriz Haddad Maia+5000
207186Karolina Muchova+5000
207183Linda Fruhvirtova+5000
207177Qinwen Zheng+5000
207192Anhelina Kalinina+6600
207190Anna Kalinskaya+6600
207165Belinda Bencic+6600
207169Karolina Pliskova+6600
207191Linda Noskova+6600
207175Liudmila Samsonova+6600
207179Madison Keys+6600
207181Petra Kvitova+6600
207168Victoria Azarenka+6600
207172Martina Trevisan+8000
207166Anett Kontaveit+10000
207170Angelique Kerber+10000
207171Danielle Collins+10000
207193Marta Kostyuk+10000
207194Rebeka Masarova+10000
207188Sorana Cirstea+10000
207157Leylah Fernandez+15000
 
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Carlos Alcaraz, Novak Djokovic on same half of French Open draw.​

PARIS -- Carlos Alcaraz and the man he just replaced atop the rankings, 22-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic, were placed in the same half of the French Open field in Thursday's draw and could face each other in the semifinals.
Alcaraz is seeded No. 1 at a Grand Slam tournament for the first time and was automatically placed in the top section of the bracket. Djokovic is No. 3 and so could have ended up on either half -- had he landed in the bottom, he and Alcaraz could only have met in the final at Roland Garros, where 14-time champion Rafael Nadal will be missing for the first time since he made his debut at the clay-court major in 2005.
Typically, the previous year's singles champions are invited to appear at the draw, so 2022 women's winner Iga Swiatek was present Thursday. Nadal, of course, was not. Still, he was the first player mentioned at the outset of the ceremony by French Tennis Federation president Gilles Morreton, who noted, "Unfortunately, he cannot play the tournament this year."
Swiatek did not appear to show any ill effects from the hurt right thigh that caused her to stop playing in the third set of her quarterfinal match in Rome last weekend. She indicated almost immediately that the issue would not prevent her from competing in Paris, where she has won two of her three major trophies.
"It's like my favorite tournament in the whole year, so I'm always excited to come back," said Swiatek, who has been ranked No. 1 for more than a year. "Before the tournament, I get this extra motivation to practice harder, to make everything better."
The draw put her in a potential quarterfinal against No. 6 Coco Gauff in what would be a rematch of last year's French Open final.
Alcaraz, who just turned 20, and Djokovic, who just turned 36, have played each other just once previously, in the semifinals of the Madrid Open in May 2022. Alcaraz won that one 6-7 (5), 7-5, 7-6 (5) -- a day after beating Nadal in the quarterfinals, becoming the first player to defeat both Djokovic and Nadal at the same clay-court tournament. Alcaraz went on to collect the title there with a straight-sets victory over Alexander Zverev in the final.
It was Zverev who ended Alcaraz's 14-match winning streak in the French Open quarterfinals last year. That was also the round where Nadal stopped Djokovic in a four-set, four-hour thriller.
This time, the men's quarterfinals by seeding would be Alcaraz, the reigning US Open champion, against No. 5 Stefanos Tsitsipas, a two-time Slam finalist; Djokovic against No. 7 Andrey Rublev; No. 2 Daniil Medvedev, the 2021 US Open winner, against No. 8 Jannik Sinner; and No. 4 Casper Ruud, runner-up at the French Open and US Open last year, against No. 6 Holger Rune.
Other women's matchups in that round could be No. 4 Elena Rybakina, the reigning Wimbledon champion, against No. 7 Ons Jabeur, a two-time major finalist; No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka, who won the Australian Open in January, against No. 5 Caroline Garcia; and No. 3 Jessica Pegula vs. No. 8 Maria Sakkari.
One player who would have been seeded, 29th-ranked Paula Badosa, pulled out before the draw, saying she got a stress fracture in her spine during the Italian Open.
Swiatek will begin her tournament with a meeting against Cristina Bucsa, a Spanish player ranked 67th whose career record at the French Open is 0-1.
Some intriguing first-round matches include Sabalenka against Marta Kostyuk, Pegula against 2022 Australian Open finalist Danielle Collins, and Victoria Azarenka against Bianca Andreescu in a showdown between past Grand Slam champions.
 

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WOMEN’S DARK HORSES PRESS THEIR CLAIMS.
Much of the conversation around potential champions in the women’s draw centres around the possibility of a three-way tussle between defending champion Iga Swiatek and fellow major winners Aryna Sabalenka and Elena Rybakina.
But outside the so-called new Big Three, a skillful mix of contenders also has high hopes for 2023.

Marketa Vondrousova​

Tried and tested at the site of her maiden Grand Slam final, Marketa Vondrousova could go some way to re-establishing a top-20 presence with another deep run in Paris.
Unseeded four years ago, the crafty Czech lefty downed four seeds to become the first teenager to contest the Roland-Garros final since Ana Ivanovic in 2007 before being overwhelmed by Ashleigh Barty.
A silver medallist at the Tokyo Olympics – a run in which she upset Naomi Osaka – Vondrousova missed Paris last year due to wrist surgery.
It has been a steady route back since but the 57th-ranked 23-year-old has gathered a handy list of victims this year, including Ons Jabeur twice, and on clay, Bianca Andreescu for the loss of one game and Maria Sakkari in Rome last week.

Anhelina Kalinina​

Amid the backdrop of the ongoing war in Ukraine, Anhelina Kalinina hopes her gutsy run to a maiden WTA 1000 final in Rome last week provides a glimmer of light for those back home.
The 26-year-old entered the event as the world No.47 and felled the likes of former world No.4 Sofia Kenin, and seeds Madison Keys, Beatriz Haddad Maia and Veronika Kudermetova in three sets to become the lowest-ranked Rome finalist since 1985.
While a thigh injury cruelled her chances of a maiden title in the final against Elena Rybakina, the Ukrainian surged into the top 25 in time to land an all-important seeding at Roland-Garros.
Top-20 wins over Petra Kvitova and Veronika Kudermetova this year have only boosted her belief that she too belongs among this group.

Mayar Sherif​

The first Egyptian woman to net a Roland-Garros main draw win following her triumph over Marta Kostyuk last year, Mayar Sherif returns with more clay-court runs on the board and just outside the top 50 in 2023.
It was no coincidence the 27-year-old immediately struck form on the surface on which she was most at home when she notched a semi-final in Portugal at an ITF W100 event before a breakout a week later in Madrid.
Wins over seeds Kalinina, Caroline Garcia – her second over a top-10 opponent – and Elise Mertens pitted her into a maiden WTA 1000 quarter-final where she snatched a set from eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka.
Drawing inspiration from fellow North African Ons Jabeur, Sherif has reason to expect a second-week showing in Paris was well within reach.
 

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Victoria Azarenka (18) v Bianca Andreescu​

A meeting of former Grand Slam champions is one of the gems of round one, as Victoria Azarenka and Bianca Andreescu are set to lock horns for the first time. 18th-seeded Azarenka has the shinier clay-court pedigree, having reached a semi-final in Paris in 2013, and the last eight on two other occasions.
Andreescu, recently returned from an ankle injury suffered in Miami in March, plays a style of game - complete with heavy topspin and imaginative angles - that is well-suited for the terre battue. The Canadian has failed to reach beyond the second round in her two previous main draw appearances in Paris, but the 22-year-old’s time to shine on the red dirt is bound to happen - it’s just a question of when.
 

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Maria Sakkari (8) v Karolina Muchova​

A semi-finalist here in 2021, charismatic Greek Maria Sakkari hopes the third time is a charm when she faces her clay nemesis Karolina Muchova in the first round.
Former world No.19 Muchova, just beginning to find her form on tour after having her 2022 season nipped by back and abdominal injuries, owns a 2-0 lifetime edge over Sakkari with both wins coming on clay. In fact, it was Muchova who sent Sakkari packing last year in Paris, upsetting her in the second round, 7-6(5), 7-6(4).
Sakkari has shown signs of life this spring, reaching the semis in Madrid, but it has been an uneven season for the world No.8 - she'll need to elevate her game to take out the crafty Muchova.
 

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Danielle Collins v Jessica Pegula (3)​

Jessica Pegula may be the heavy favourite in this first-round all-American clash in Paris, thanks to her lofty ranking and 2-0 lifetime record against Danielle Collins, but it is never wise to sleep on the feisty Floridian. Collins is a former Roland-Garros quarter-finalist (2020) just like Pegula (2022), after all. The American also enters with 10 career top-10 wins to her credit.
But recent form favours Pegula, as the Buffalo native has won six of nine on clay this spring, including a run to the Madrid semis, while Collins has not won a match on clay since last year.
 

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Karolina Pliskova (16) v Sloane Stephens​

A rivalry that dates back over a decade between two tour stalwarts resumes in round one in Paris, as 2018 runner-up Sloane Stephens faces 2017 semi-finalist (and former world No.1) Karolina Pliskova.
Stephens, a former US Open champion, holds the 4-1 lifetime edge over the Czech power broker, and the pair have split two meetings on clay with Stephens scoring a 7-5, 6-1 triumph in the second round in Paris in 2021.
That was their last meeting. Their next will be an exciting contrast in style between two proven clay-courters in search of a Grand Slam revival – a perfect recipe for a first-round cracker.
 

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Marta Kostyuk v Aryna Sabalenka (2)​

Aryna Sabalenka has been a revelation in 2023, winning her maiden major title at the Australian Open and racking up additional titles in Adelaide and Madrid. Far from satiated by her success, the 23-year-old continues to turn over every rock in her quest to challenge Iga Swiatek for the No.1 ranking.
Here in Paris the No.2 seed will attempt to make the second week for the first time, a feat already achieved by the dangerous Marta Kostyuk, who has earned two career top-20 wins on clay, including one over former champion Garbine Muguruza en route to a round of 16 performance in 2021.
Sabalenka took their only previous meeting in straight sets in Dubai in 2022.
 

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Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN) [10] v Fabio Fognini (ITA)​

This is the definition of a popcorn match. Top 10 powerhouse Felix Auger-Aliassime is still bidding to fulfil his potential.
The Canadian will take to court with the mischievous Fabio Fognini. The Italian may have fallen to world No.130, but he has the artillery to fire through anyone on his day.
Two top 50 wins over Andy Murray and Miomir Kecmanovic on home courts in Rome indicate the Roland-Garros 2011 quarter-finalist could be feeling in the groove for an almighty upset.
 

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Benoit Paire (FRA) [WC] v Cameron Norrie (GBR) [14]​

All factors point to the ultra-consistent Brit advancing to the second round. Cameron Norrie has excelled on clay this season, heading into the Buenos Aires final and then lifting the Rio trophy courtesy of a three-set triumph over Carlos Alcaraz.
While the world No.14 leads their head-to-head 2-0, facing Benoit Paire is wildly unpredictable.
The home fans adore this supremely gifted 34-year-old, who always draws a crowd and can light it up with unique shot selection.
Expect chants, expect hot shots, expect the unexpected.
 

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Novak Djokovic (SRB) [3] v Aleksandar Kovacevic (USA)​

This is one for the tennis purists.
American Aleksandar Kovacevic has some serious flair on the tennis court with a picture-perfect single-handed backhand and the ability to transition up the court with ease.
Trust us, the world No.114 has some serious talent. Being Kovacevic's Grand Slam debut, will he go for broke and swing freely?
Over the net, world No.3 Novak Djokovic is attempting to carve out even more history in Paris. The two-time champion is chasing a men's all-time record 23rd major.
It will be intriguing to see how the Serbian attacks the unheralded American.
 

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Arthur Fils (FRA) v Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (ESP) [29]​

Spain's Alejandro Davidovich Fokina is an elite player on the terre battue.
The world No.34 was runner-up at the Monte Carlo Masters in 2022 and more recently toppled world No.6 Holger Rune to reach the round of 16 in Madrid. His court coverage and sporadic diving make 'ADF' a captivating watch.
French teenager Arthur Fils is a showman too, regularly conducting the crowd to raise the roof.
Rewind to Roland-Garros 2021 when Fils was a finalist in the boys' singles and champion in the boys' doubles alongside Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard. They are memories Fils will undoubtedly draw upon.
The home charge has already rocketed up to world No.112 with standout wins over Stan Wawrinka, Richard Gasquet and Roberto Bautista Agut.
 

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Gael Monfils (FRA) v Sebastian Baez (ARG)​

Hot shots you never see coming, miraculous speed and athleticism. It can only be the human highlight reel, Gael Monfils.
The Frenchman, a semi-finalist in 2008, is on the comeback trail from injuries, however the 36-year-old can never be ruled out.
Monfils will have to lace up his runners because Sebastian Baez is a dogged athlete with an endless reservoir of energy.
The Argentine youngster has plenty of clay-court credentials too – lifting titles in Estoril in 2022 and Cordoba in 2023.
 

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Ben Shelton (USA) [30] v Lorenzo Sonego (ITA)​

This is a top 50 tussle well worth tuning in for when 20-year-old Roland-Garros debutant Ben Shelton and world No.45 Lorenzo Sonego square off.
In their previous meeting on hard courts in Cincinnati last year, Shelton prevailed in a thriller, 7-6(5), 3-6, 7-5.
Italian Sonego thrives on the front foot with early striking and possess some mind-boggling retrieval skills, while Shelton, with his power, versatile serve and canny net play, is already being mentioned as a future major contender.
In his first season venturing outside the United States, has already skyrocketed to world No.35, following a standout run to the Australian Open quarter-finals in January. Could he be about to rumble the established guard in Paris?
 

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Most-Bet Futures


Here are the five most popular futures bets for the women’s French Open:



RankNameOdds
1Iga Swiatek(-125)
2Aryna Sabalenka(+650)
3Elena Rybakina (+700)
4Ons Jabeur(+3500)
5Cori Gauff(+3500)




Most-Bet Futures


Here are the four most popular futures bets for the men’s French Open:



RankNameOdds
1Carlos Alcaraz(+160)
2Novak Djokovic (+250)
3Holger Rune(+900)
4Daniil Medvedev(+1000)
 

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