Mirra Andreeva Wins French Open To Claim First Major

Woman in blue dress sitting on tennis court (Photo by Jeffery Erhunse on Unsplash )

Woman in blue dress sitting on tennis court (Photo by Jeffery Erhunse on Unsplash)

Summary
  • Andreeva beat Maja Chwalinska 6-3, 6-2 to win the 2026 French Open
  • Her French Open victory gave her six WTA singles titles in total
  • Andreeva and Diana Shnaider won Olympic silver for doubles at Paris 2024
  • She reached a career-high WTA singles ranking of No. 5 on 14 July 2025

Mirra Andreeva, known on tour as mirra andreeva, won the 2026 French Open with a straight sets victory over Maja Chwalinska, 6-3, 6-2, as reported by TNT Sports.

The win gave Andreeva her first Grand Slam title and took her career total to six WTA Tour singles trophies, according to WTA records, and she lost only one set during the tournament, the WTA reports.

The French Open triumph followed a rapid rise that included WTA 1000 titles and a move into the top ranks, with the WTA listing a career-high singles ranking of world No. 5 on 14 July 2025 and a current ranking of No. 7 on 4 May 2026.

Doubles Success Background And Recent Form

Andreeva has matched singles progress with notable doubles results, winning three WTA doubles titles and reaching a career-high doubles ranking of No. 12 on 15 September 2025, according to the WTA.

She and Diana Shnaider took silver for the Individual Neutral Athletes at the Paris 2024 Olympics in women’s doubles, losing the final to Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini, as reported by the Women’s Tennis Association.

The partnership with Shnaider also produced two WTA 1000 doubles titles, including the Miami Open in 2025 and the Italian Open in 2026, and they qualified for the year-end WTA Finals doubles event in Riyadh, where they were eliminated in the group stage.

Andreeva’s rise accelerated through 2024 and 2025, with WTA 1000 singles wins at Dubai and Indian Wells in 2025 and an Indian Wells final win over Aryna Sabalenka, which the BBC and WTA covered during her push into the top 10.

Born in Krasnoyarsk on 29 April 2007, Andreeva turned professional in 2022 and trains in Cannes at the Elite Tennis Center, the same base cited in media reports, with former major champion Conchita Martínez listed as her coach.

She is the younger sister of fellow professional Erika Andreeva and was a former world No. 1 junior on 29 May 2023, milestones recorded in tournament coverage and WTA material that chart her progression from the junior ranks to Grand Slam champion.