Grand Slam Tennis

Roland-Garros Women’s Final

The Roland-Garros Women’s Final takes place in Paris on Saturday 6 June. Watch the clay-court Grand Slam final live at Sherlock Pub in The Hague from 15:00.

Final overview

The women’s singles final in Paris

The Roland-Garros Women’s Final is one of the biggest matches of the tennis season. Played on the clay courts of Stade Roland Garros in Paris, it decides the women’s singles champion at the French Open.

Clay-court tennis rewards patience, movement, heavy topspin, defensive strength and tactical point construction. Finals in Paris often become physical and mental contests as much as technical ones.

Match facts

EventWomen’s Final
TournamentRoland-Garros
CategoryGrand Slam
DateSaturday 6 June
Start time15:00
VenueStade Roland Garros
SurfaceClay
LocationParis

Clay-court tennis

Why Roland-Garros is different

Longer rallies

Clay slows the ball down and creates higher bounces, often leading to longer rallies and more extended tactical exchanges than on grass or hard courts.

Movement matters

Players need exceptional footwork and balance. Sliding into shots, recovering quickly and controlling court position are essential at Roland-Garros.

Mental pressure

Winning a Grand Slam final on clay requires patience and discipline. Momentum can shift slowly, and players must handle long games, break points and physical pressure.

Finalists

Final lineup to be confirmed

The finalists for the 2026 Roland-Garros Women’s Final are not confirmed yet. This section should be updated after the women’s semifinals with the confirmed players, seedings and route to the final.

Until the finalists are confirmed, the stable information is the event itself: Roland-Garros Women’s Final, Saturday 6 June, 15:00 Netherlands time.

Status

Finalist 1To be confirmed
Finalist 2To be confirmed
SeedingsTo be confirmed
Update afterSemifinals

Defending champion

Coco Gauff entered as defending champion

Coco Gauff is listed as the defending women’s singles champion for Roland-Garros 2026. Defending a Grand Slam title brings a different kind of pressure, especially on clay where every round can become physically demanding.

The women’s final will decide whether the title is retained or whether a new champion takes the Roland-Garros trophy.

2025 context

2025 championCoco Gauff
2026 statusDefending champion
TournamentFrench Open
SurfaceClay

Roland-Garros history

A Grand Slam built on clay

Paris Grand Slam

Roland-Garros is the French Open and the clay-court Grand Slam of the tennis season, played at Stade Roland Garros in Paris.

Physical test

Clay rewards endurance, consistency and point construction. Players often need to win matches through patience as much as power.

Final pressure

A Grand Slam final is about more than form. Nerves, momentum, crowd energy and big-point execution can decide the title.

Watch at Sherlock Pub

Roland-Garros Women’s Final — Saturday 6 June, 15:00

Sherlock Pub will show the Roland-Garros Women’s Final live in The Hague. For groups, reserving ahead is recommended.