Roland Garros

Road to Roland Garros: Stan Wawrinka, Paula Badosa, Grigor Dimitrov miss entry cutoff

All will likely need wild cards to avoid the qualifying rounds in Paris.



MONTE-CARLO, MONACO - APRIL 06: Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland in action during his Round of 64 match against Sebastian Baez of Argentina on day two of the Rolex Monte-Carlo Masters at Monte-Carlo Country Club on April 06, 2026 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco. (Photo by Mateo Villalba/Getty Images)
© 2026 Mateo Villalba

The Roland Garros entry lists were released Tuesday, officially kicking off the road to Paris for competitors making the initial cut.

The women’s field is led by top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka, this year’s Australian Open title holder Elena Rybakina, reigning champion Coco Gauff and four-time winner Iga Swiatek. The 2025 girls’ champion, Lilli Tagger, vaulted 20 spots with a quarterfinal run in Linz to secure her debut. It closed with world No. 101 Daria Snigur, as four women used protected rankings.

CONDENSED MATCH: Carlos Alcaraz edges Jannik Sinner to win Roland Garros24:58

Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, who produced one of the greatest finals in the tournament’s history last June, are heavy favorites to meet for the men's championship again. Former finalist Alexander Zverev and three-time titlist Novak Djokovic complete the current Top 4. Once two protected ranking entries were factored in, 103rd-ranked Rinky Hijikata rounded out the list. 

Among the familiar faces likely needing a wild card to avoid the qualifying rounds is Stan Wawrinka. The Swiss, who triumphed 11 years ago, dropped three spots to No. 107 following an opening defeat in Monte Carlo. The 41-year-old briefly returned to the Top 100 in February, having earlier advanced to the third round at January's Australian Open.

Paula Badosa and Grigor Dimitrov also fell short. The Spaniard was five out of her respective draw, as she continues to navigate another injury. Dimitrov tumbled 42 spots to No. 135 after dropping to 2-7 on the year last week in his comeback season from a pectoral muscle tear sustained at 2025 Wimbledon.