
SIX TITLES,
ONE SHOE.
Received a customized Vomero Plus, hand-painted by Sud Tirol artist Edmund Nagler. The silhouette incorporates motifs for each of the six consecutive ATP 1000 titles he carried into Paris.






The Tennis Sports Marketing team hosted our athletes at the Molitor Hotel in Paris. Athletes picked up their French Open collection,



A quiet corridor at Hôtel Molitor, the Swoosh lit at the end of the hall.
Ballet barre, peonies on every surface, the full French Open collection waiting on the rack.
Pale bouclé sofas, a quiet screen, peonies on the table — Paris on mute before the noise of Chatrier.
NikeCourt athletes passed through the Molitor lounge across two weeks in Paris.

Received a customized Vomero Plus, hand-painted by Sud Tirol artist Edmund Nagler. The silhouette incorporates motifs for each of the six consecutive ATP 1000 titles he carried into Paris.









From Chatrier to the outer courts — the matches, the milestones, and the moments that defined NikeCourt's Roland Garros.

No longer just a teen prodigy. A Grand Slam champion. The 19-year-old defeated qualifier Maja Chwalinska 6‑3, 6‑2 in 1h 22m to claim her first Roland Garros title — the youngest champion in Paris since Monica Seles in 1992.


Diede has another French Open trophy in her hands once again.
Diede is definitely a tennis legend — she won her 24th Grand Slam singles title, and her sixth at Roland Garros,
by defeating France's Ksénia Chasteau 6-1, 6-0.

Brazilian flags filled Court Simonne-Mathieu as top-seeded Guto Miguel of Brazil faced American Michael Antonius in Saturday's boys' singles final.
With the win, the charismatic youngster made history, becoming the first Brazilian to capture a Roland-Garros junior title.
No Brazilian had reached the boys' final in Paris since 1967, adding further significance to the moment.

Japan's Tokito Oda captured a fourth consecutive men's wheelchair singles title at the French Open on Saturday, becoming only the second player to achieve this milestone, after Japanese legend Shingo Kunieda.
The win extended Tokito's Grand Slam streak to five tournaments and brought his total Grand Slam titles to nine.

Niels clinched his 3rd French Open quad singles title after beating Turkish Ahmet Kaplan.
Beyond the headline runs, the fortnight delivered debuts, heat-warped exits, breakthroughs from teenagers, and quarter-final heartbreak. A field-wide read on the rest of the field in red.

Jannik unfortunately suffered from the heat and exited in the second round. He arrived in Paris carrying a record streak — six straight ATP 1000 titles.

The 17-year-old Frenchman captivated Parisian crowds with emotion, energy and fearless shotmaking. The run ended in the third round — the conversation about his ceiling is only beginning.

Federico qualified at Roland Garros at 19 and became the first player born in 2007 to win a Grand Slam main-draw match — a quiet milestone with a long shadow.

Russian teen Alina Korneeva made her French Open debut, qualified through, and reached the second round. After an injury-disrupted 2025, the 18-year-old returns with big goals.

Lost in the quarter-finals after leading a set and two breaks against Diana Shnaider. So close — and still No. 1 in the world.

Reached the quarter-finals before falling to eventual finalist Chwalinska. A career-best week in Paris.

Torn ACL in the second round. The whole NikeCourt family is with her through the months ahead — and ready for the return.

Paris is in the books. Next stop — SW19. New surface, same ambition, a fresh page waiting to be written.