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Edited:Â May 26, 2024
[+[!LIVEFREE!]+] French Open 2024 Tennis LIVE Coverage ON TV Channel Online
[+[!LIVEFREE!]+] French Open 2024 Tennis LIVE Coverage ON TV Channel Online
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French Open 2024 live stream: how to watch tennis free online and TV, schedule, latest news, dates, seeds. The world’s best tennis players take to the clay courts at Roland Garros this week for the 2024 French Open. Livestream all the action from Roland Garros as the world's top players take to the clay court championship.
Click Here to Watch French Open 2024 Tennis Live Online
Novak Djokovic is the defending French Open champion on the men’s side, while Iga Świątek is the defending women’s champ. All-time French Open title holder Rafael Nadal is expected to make his final appearance at Roland Garros this year, as the Spanish star has hinted that he may retire at the end of the season.
Want to watch the 2024 French Open on TV and online? Here’s what you need to know.
When Is the 2024 French Open?
After a week of qualifying matches, the 2024 French Open officially runs from May 26 to June 9. The tournament runs for two weeks, with men’s singles, women’s singles, men’s doubles, women’s doubles and mixed doubles all being contested.
The blue riband event of the clay court season, the French Open is again back at Roland Garros for 2024, with yet another enthralling tournament expected out on the dirt in the Parisian outskirts. The French Open, which starts on Sunday, May 26 and ends on Sunday, June 9
Despite having yet to win at Roland Garros and struggling for form since winning Indian Wells earlier in the year, Carlos Alcaraz will probably start as favourite as arguably the most fearsome clay courter on tour. The Spaniard is now fitter after running out of gas in the last four against Novak Djokovic last year, but injuries early in the clay court season have stymied his form out on the dirt.
Defending champion Djokovic, meanwhile, has also struggled for form in 2024 and has split with coach Goran Ivanisevic. The 37-year-old Serb remains a potent opponent on any surface and is still world number one, but is without a tournament win in 2024, he faces French wildcard Pierre-Hugues Herbert in round one.
The other big danger, Jannik Sinner, has also struggled for fitness in the past month. By mid-April the Italian had won three tournaments on tour, including the Australian Open and the Miami Open Masters event, but he may struggle to replicate that early-season form. Sinner and Alcaraz are in the same half of the draw.
Alexander Zverev could take advantage, the German looking imperious on serve in winning the Italian Open, the final Masters event before Roland Garros, and jumping above Daniil Medvedev to become world number four.
Zverev's first round opponent could hardly be more symbolic: Rafael Nadal. The Mallorcan has won at Roland Garros a record 14 times, holding a staggering 112-3 win-loss record, but injuries have blighted recent seasons to the point where he has confirmed this will be his appearance at his favourite Grand Slam.
One of the three to beat Nadal, Stan Wawrinka in the 2015 final, will face fellow former major winner Andy Murray in another mouthwatering first round encounter. The winner is drawn to face 32nd seed, and another Brit, Cameron Norrie.
For the women, defending champion Iga Swiatek is again the favourite. The Polish world number one has won three of the last four tournaments at Roland Garros and is look for her third successive title on the Parisian clay in 2024. Also the champion at Indian Wells, Madrid and Rome, Swiatek is the player to beat, with movement unmatched on this surface. She has a tough draw, though, with a potential second round opponent the returning major winner Naomi Osaka, recently back from maternity leave.
Aryna Sabalenka will be Swiatek's main challenger. The Belarusian won the Australian Open in January to confirm her major pedigree.
Coco Gauff completes the top three, who stand apart from the rest of the pack. The American fell in the Melbourne final to Sabalenka but will channel her US Open 2023 victory to try to win on the clay. Former French Open champion Jeļena Ostapenko could also be an outside bet – the Latvian has won two singles tournaments on tour this season to return to the top 10.
Who is playing next at the French Open 2024?
Afternoon session
From 6 a.m. ET / 3 a.m. PT / 11 a.m. BST / 8 p.m. AEST
Court Philippe Chatrier
Lucia Bronzetti vs Naomi Osaka
JJ Wolf vs Carlos Alcaraz (3)
Eva Lys vs Caroline Garcia (21)
Court Suzanne Lenglen
Ugo Humbert (17) vs Lorenzo Sonego
Jelena Ostapenko (9) vs Jaqueline Cristian
Richard Gasquet vs Borna Coric
Barbora Krejcikova (24) vs Viktorija Golubic
Evening session
Not before 3:15 p.m. ET / 12:15 p.m. PT / 8:15 p.m. BST / 5:15 a.m. AEST (Mon)
Court Philippe Chatrier
Stan Wawrinka vs Andy Murray
After a couple of months' build up out on the clay courts of Europe, we're finally here – day one of the French Open 2024. Not only that, there are some fascinating matches out there to begin Roland Garros with a bang.
First up on Court Phlippe Chatrier, Naomi Osaka returns to a grand slam after maternity and takes on the Italian Lucia Bronzetti. Next up, potential men's champion Carlos Alcaraz will look to put his recent injury struggles behind him and record an early win.
Meanwhile, home favorites Caroline Garcia, Ugo Humbert and Richard Gasquet are all in action on the two main courts on the opening day.
The biggest match, though, is on Chatrier for the night session. Two former grand slam champions – Stan Wawrinka and Andy Murray – take center stage as the ageing pair duke it out for what could be the final time in Paris. This was a classic semi-final when the Swiss emerged victorious en route to victory in 2017 – can the duo wind the clock back and deliver another banger?
It's now just a few weeks until the French Open gets underway, on Monday, May 20, when the world’s best players will battle it out on the famous clay courts of Roland Garros. Novak Djokovic and Iga Swiatek are the defending champions but there are a whole host of contenders at the second Grand Slam of 2024.
Last year Djokovic took full advantage of Rafa Nadal’s absence in Paris as he lifted his third French Open title courtesy of a dominant victory over clay-court specialist Casper Ruud. However, this year, the Serbian has struggled to find his best form and could face a tough task to defend his crown.
Jannik Sinner is the form player of 2024 and will be confident of going beyond the quarter-finals for the first time in his career, while Stefanos Tsitsipas looked superb as he won the Monte Carlo Masters. Then there are the likes of Indian Wells winner Carlos Alcaraz, two-time French Open finalist Ruud and of course, the great Rafa Nadal.
When it comes to the women’s draw, Swiatek is the heavy favorite after winning the tournament three times in the last four years. The world number one’s game is perfectly suited to clay and she will hope to add to her haul of four Grand Slam titles.
However, there are plenty of challengers including Elena Rybakina who triumphed in Stuttgart after beating Swiatek in the semi-finals. Coco Gauff was a finalist in Paris two years ago and now has a Slam to her name, while Aryna Sabalenka will hope she can rediscover the form that saw her triumph earlier this year at the Australian Open.
Few tennis tournaments command the world’s attention like the French Open. One of the sport's historic four grand slams and the only one played on a clay surface, the event dates back more than a century and is synonymous with fast serves and high drama in the competitive game.
Traditionally held in the late European spring, on the eve of summer, a matter of weeks from the prestigious Wimbledon across the English Channel, the event has gained further popularity since the turn of the century, with a synonymous reputation linking it to Rafael Nadal, who is anticipated to participate in the French Open for the final time.
Of his 22 men's singles titles in grand slam events, the Spaniard has won a record 14 of them at Roland Garros, underscoring his sheer dominance in the event. He could face a tricky draw in the first round as he enters the tournament unseeded with a protected ranking. But this year, eyes will be on rival Novak Djokovic as he seeks to extend his own career tally of 24 such victories.