With Roland Garros starting today, here’s a look at the players attempting to shock six of the biggest stars in the first round:


Hubert Hurkacz
v Novak Djokovic
(world number one, 2016 Roland Garros champion, 15-time major winner)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Hurkacz’s Roland Garros best: 2nd rd, 2018


The 22-year-old Polish world number 43 is a low-key figure off court but when he’s playing he has a “rip your heart out, this assassin type of energy” said his coach Craig Boynton, who counts former number one and Slam winner Jim Courier among his previous pupils. Hurkacz thrives on hard courts. He reached the quarter-finals at Indian Wells were he beat Kei Nishikori and Denis Shapovalov before losing to Roger Federer. A week later, he knocked world number four Dominic Thiem out of Miami. On clay this spring, his best run was a third round slot in Madrid having come through qualifying.


Yannick Hanfmann
v Rafael Nadal
(world number two, 11-time winner at Roland Garros and defending champion, 17-time major winner)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Hanfmann’s Roland Garros best: 1st rd, 2019
Hanfmann is 27 years old and ranked at a lowly 184 in the world having turned professional relatively late in his career after a four-year US college stint in which he helped the University of Southern California win two national titles. Having made it through qualifying in Paris, his match against 11-time champion Rafael Nadal will be his first on the main tour this year. Has never won a main draw match at the Slams and his form reflects that statistic. In 2019, he has earned just $3,600 while world number two Nadal has banked $3.7mn in the same period.


Lorenzo Sonego
v Roger Federer
(world number three, 2009 Roland Garros champion and 20-time major winner)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Sonego’s Roland Garros best: 1st rd, 2019


Sonego, a 24-year-old Italian, is ranked 73 and is a potential banana skin for Federer having made the quarter-finals at the Monte Carlo Masters this year after qualifying. He was also in the last-eight on clay at Marrakech. Sonego fell in qualifying at Roland Garros in 2018 while best run at a Slam was a second round appearance at the 2018 US Open.


Anna Karolina Schmiedlova
v Naomi Osaka
(world number one and reigning US and Australian Open champion, two-time major winner)
Head-to-head: First meeting
Schmiedlova’s Roland Garros best: 3rd rd 2015


A former top 30 player, the 24-year-old Schmiedlova is now at 92 in the world but boasts solid form at Roland Garros having defeated Venus Williams on her way to the third round in 2015. The Slovak also has three titles — two on clay — and has been a runner-up on two occasions including at Hobart in January.


Ajla Tomljanovic
v Simona Halep
(world number three, defending Roland Garros champion)
Head-to-head: Halep leads 1-0
Tomljanovic’s Roland Garros best: 4th rd 2014


Born in Croatia but now an Australian citizen, the 26-year-old Tomljanovic is ranked 47 in the world. A four-time finalist on the WTA Tour. Reached the fourth round in Paris in 2014, beating former champion Francesca Schiavone in the first round and third-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska in the last 32. Defending Roland Garros champion Halep won the pair’s only previous encounter, coming from a set down in Cincinnati last year.


Vitalia Diatchenko
v Serena Williams
(world number 10, former number one; 2002, 2013, 2015 Roland Garros champion, 23-time major winner)
Head-to-head: Williams leads 1-0
Diatchenko’s Roland Garros best: 2nd rd 2015


Diatchenko is a 28-year-old Russian, ranked at 82 in the world, but with the capability to shock the big names, famously beating Maria Sharapova in the first round at Wimbledon in a three-hour epic last year. Diatchenko has been plagued by injuries, particularly with ligament and Achilles setbacks. She admits that she returned from surgery too rapidly at the US Open in 2015 where she was forced to retire from her first round match — against Serena Williams.
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