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Tennis-Svitolina balances Rome form with calm approach in Paris

By Thomson Reuters May 23, 2026 | 6:30 AM

By Shrivathsa Sridhar

PARIS, May 23 (Reuters) – Elina Svitolina is among the contenders for the French Open title after her Rome triumph but the Ukrainian played down her chances, saying a calmer mindset and focus on ​her performance outweighed thoughts of a long-awaited maiden Grand Slam title.

The 31-year-old ‌Svitolina outlasted defending Roland Garros champion Coco Gauff in the Italian Open final last week after getting battling wins over world number two Elena Rybakina and third-ranked Iga Swiatek.

Despite lifting her biggest title since a maternity break for the birth of her daughter with fellow player Gael ‌Monfils ​in 2022, Svitolina, ranked seventh in the world, said ⁠she would not put pressure ⁠on herself heading into the Grand Slam starting on Sunday.

“It’s all about trying to focus on my game, my performance, not going too far with the thoughts about if I can win the title or not,” Svitolina, who opens ​her campaign against Hungarian Anna Bondar, told reporters on Saturday.

“There’s still lots of matches to win to get that title, and you need to be fit ⁠and mentally ready.

“There’s still a lot of ⁠work ahead. It’s just important to focus on the first round, ​one match at a time, and be ready for anything that comes my way.”

Svitolina, ​who has gone past the quarter-finals at all the Grand Slams ‌except Roland Garros, said she was at peace with how her career has unfolded.

“It’s okay if I don’t win a slam,” she added.

“It’s also fine, in a way, because if you’re not okay with that I think you can just eat yourself ⁠from inside and all the time not be happy about what you do on the court.

“I think my career, even if I finish tomorrow, is okay. And if ⁠something happens, I’ll be fine ‌with that and I’ll still be a happy person ⁠and live my life good.

“So I just want to have ​this mentality ‌now, because I think when you’re younger, of course ​you want to ⁠win a slam, this is the goal, number one, and you’re so upset and you can really damage yourself mentally if you don’t succeed.

“I still believe I can win a Grand Slam but I’m also fine if it’s not going to happen or if it’s not on the cards for me.”

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Paris; ​editing by Clare Fallon)