{"id":104890,"date":"2026-05-19T07:30:43","date_gmt":"2026-05-19T11:30:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/?p=104890"},"modified":"2026-05-18T13:31:24","modified_gmt":"2026-05-18T17:31:24","slug":"wta-power-rankings-fench-open","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/2026\/05\/19\/wta-power-rankings-fench-open\/","title":{"rendered":"Pre-French Open WTA Power Rankings: Who is Ready for Roland Garros?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>With the French Open just around the corner, the clay court season has done its job of separating contenders from pretenders. These WTA Power Rankings are not about who holds the highest ranking on paper, they are about who has the form, the history, and the specific ingredients that tend to matter most on the slow red dirt of Philippe-Chatrier. Five names emerge above the rest.<\/p>\n<h2>Pre-French Open WTA Power Rankings<\/h2>\n<h3>1. Aryna Sabalenka \u2014 Still the One to Beat<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 1<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/2026\/03\/30\/wta-tennis-power-rankings-sabalenka-crown\/\" target=\"_blank\" target=\"_self\">Previous Power Ranking<\/a>: 1<\/p>\n<p>No WTA Power Rankings list heading into a Major starts anywhere other than Sabalenka right now. The Belarusian is still the World #1, and her recent Grand Slam record is extraordinary as she has reached the final of five of her last six major tournaments. She does not yet have a Roland Garros title, which remains the one conspicuous gap in her resume, and her clay form this season has been slightly below her usual standard, with an early exit in Rome this week. But writing off a player of this caliber based on one below-par clay swing would be a mistake. When the pressure rises across two weeks in Paris and the draw thins out, Sabalenka&#8217;s power and her ability to dominate baseline exchanges become increasingly difficult to neutralize.<\/p>\n<h3>2. Coco Gauff \u2014 The Defending Champion With Something to Prove<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 4<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: 2<\/p>\n<p>Gauff arrives in Paris wearing the target on her back that comes with defending a Grand Slam title, and she will feel every bit of it. <a href=\"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/2025\/06\/07\/coco-gauff-wins-first-french-open-title\/\" target=\"_blank\" target=\"_self\">She claimed the Roland Garros title in 2025<\/a> in a three-set comeback over Sabalenka, and she has since demonstrated that the win was no fluke. She also just lost the Rome final to Elina Svitolina, which will sting but also confirms she is competing at the very highest level of the game right now. Gauff on clay is a different challenge from Gauff on hard courts. Her movement, her heavy groundstrokes and her mental composure in long rallies all translate beautifully to the surface.<\/p>\n<h3>3. Iga Swiatek \u2014 History That Does Not Expire<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 3<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: 3<\/p>\n<p>No WTA Power Rankings for a clay major can ignore Swiatek, regardless of what her recent form suggests. She is a four-time <a href=\"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/category\/french-open\/\" target=\"_blank\" target=\"_self\">French Open<\/a> champion with a career win rate of 85% on clay. Her 2026 season has been uneven and her aura at this event has visibly faded since the peak years where she was essentially untouchable. But the muscle memory of four titles in Paris does not simply disappear. She made the semifinals there last year even in what was considered a poor clay season. Discount her at your own risk.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"max-width: px\"><smartframe-embed class=\"smartframe_wp_element\" customer-id=\"6dfbdbe8ed6ff2eb8f8e8ee3c2cef8f4\" image-id=\"wenntEjByBp7\" style=\"width: 100%; display: inline-flex; max-width: 3500px; aspect-ratio: 3500\/2332;\" ><\/smartframe-embed><\/p>\n<p><!--nextpage--><\/p>\n<h3>4. Elina Svitolina \u2014 The Never-Give-Up Queen<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 7<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: 5<\/p>\n<p>Svitolina is the freshest name in these WTA Power Rankings and perhaps the most compelling story of the entire clay swing. She <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=WXNZTi6qd1Y\" target=\"_blank\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">won the Rome title<\/a>, beating Gauff in the final, and the victory pushed her up to #7 in the WTA rankings and into the top three of the Race to Riyadh. She has been quietly dismantling Top 10 opponents all season&#8211;she holds a 4-0 record against Top 10 players in 2026, with wins over Swiatek, Gauff, and Mirra Andreeva among them. Svitolina has never been past the quarter-finals in Paris, which is the one caveat, but she arrives with more momentum than almost anyone in the draw and the type of fighting mentality that makes her genuinely dangerous in long matches on a slow surface.<\/p>\n<h3>5. Mirra Andreeva \u2014 The Teenager Who Lurks<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 8<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: 7<\/p>\n<p>Andreeva closes out these WTA Power Rankings as the player who could cause the most chaos from outside the expected conversation. She is still only a teenager, but her Roland Garros record is already quietly remarkable&#8211;in her two full clay seasons on the WTA Tour she has reached the semifinals once and the quarterfinals once at the French Open, alongside multiple deep runs in Madrid and Rome. While she might not be playing at the top of her game right now, can you really dismiss someone who has proven in the past that she can? We rather wouldn\u2019t.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"max-width: px\"><smartframe-embed class=\"smartframe_wp_element\" customer-id=\"b0c95bc04383cef69c6b47df872135cf\" image-id=\"WmOBT8Yv1UIc\" style=\"width: 100%; display: inline-flex; max-width: 3508px; aspect-ratio: 3508\/2480;\" ><\/smartframe-embed><\/p>\n<h3>6. Marta Kostyuk \u2014 The Madrid Champion Arrives in Paris<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 15<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: Not ranked<\/p>\n<p>Kostyuk may be the biggest story of the WTA clay season so far, and she carries that momentum directly into Roland Garros. Her Madrid title sent her surging up the rankings to a career-high position, and the Ukrainian has been playing with a freedom and authority that suggests someone who has finally stopped worrying about results and started simply playing tennis. She has the game to hurt Top 10 players on clay&#8211;the serve, the aggression, the willingness to take time away from opponents&#8211;and in a draw where the top seeds will be accounting for each other, Kostyuk is exactly the player capable of slipping through.<\/p>\n<p><!--nextpage--><\/p>\n<h3>7. Jessica Pegula \u2014 The Relentless American<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 5<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: 6<\/p>\n<p>Pegula is the most underrated player in women&#8217;s tennis when it comes to the French Open conversation, and she has been proving a point all season. At 32 years old she is playing the best tennis of her career, winning Dubai and Charleston and reaching the quarterfinals or better at every event she has entered this year, outside of Madrid. She did reach the Madrid final back in 2022, which confirms that her game translates well to the surface even if the Grand Slam breakthrough has always been the missing piece. She is steady, she is experienced, and she rarely gives opponents anything for free. In a two-week tournament, those qualities compound.<\/p>\n<h3>8. Karolina Muchova \u2014 Finally Healthy, Finally Dangerous<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 10<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: Not ranked<\/p>\n<p>Muchova&#8217;s career has been defined by the question of what she might accomplish if her body would simply cooperate. In 2026, it has. She is unbeaten against players ranked outside the top four this season, with her only losses coming against Sabalenka, Swiatek, and Gauff, all forgivable. A WTA 1000 title in Doha and semifinal runs in Brisbane and Miami confirm that this is a player genuinely competing at the top of the game. She <a href=\"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/2023\/06\/07\/karolina-muchova-continues-to-thrive-in-the-big-moments\/\" target=\"_blank\" target=\"_self\">reached the French Open final in 2023<\/a> and demonstrated that her one-handed backhand, her variety, and her ability to construct points differently than most players on Tour make her a nightmare match-up on slow red clay. When healthy, she is a genuine threat. Right now, she is healthy.<\/p>\n<h3>9. Linda Noskova \u2014 Power From the Back<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 12<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: Not ranked<\/p>\n<p>Noskova is one of the more fascinating young players in the women&#8217;s game, and Roland Garros suits her better than her ranking suggests. The Czech hits the ball as hard as almost anyone on Tour and her ability to redirect pace and hit through the court from deep positions makes her a handful for players who like to control rallies from the baseline. Quarterfinal runr in Stuttgart and Madrid this clay swing pushed her further up the rankings, and she arrives in Paris having proven she can compete over the course of a full tournament rather than simply producing isolated upsets. At a Grand Slam where big-hitting can override a lack of surface-specific pedigree in ways that do not happen at smaller events, Noskova&#8217;s ceiling is higher than her seeding implies.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"max-width: px\"><smartframe-embed class=\"smartframe_wp_element\" customer-id=\"6dfbdbe8ed6ff2eb8f8e8ee3c2cef8f4\" image-id=\"wennp2aRnCAd\" style=\"width: 100%; display: inline-flex; max-width: 3500px; aspect-ratio: 3500\/2334;\" ><\/smartframe-embed><\/p>\n<h3>10. Iva Jovic \u2014 The Fearless American Teenager<\/h3>\n<p>WTA Rank: 17<\/p>\n<p>Previous Power Ranking: Not ranked<\/p>\n<p>Jovic rounds out these WTA Power Rankings as the player most likely to cause chaos from a seeding nobody will fear. She reached a career-high ranking of World #16 in March, a rapid ascent for a teenager who appears utterly unbothered by the size of the occasion she is playing in. Her game is built on aggressive ball-striking and a refusal to play defensively regardless of who is across the net. That mindset is simultaneously her greatest weapon and her biggest vulnerability as it wins her matches she has no business winning and loses her matches she should close out. At Roland Garros, where the tournament is long enough to survive an off day, she has the tools to go deep. And she is young enough not to know she is supposed to find it difficult.<\/p>\n<p><em>Main Photo Credit: Susan Mullane-Imagn Images<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>With the French Open just around the corner, the clay court season has done its job of separating contenders from pretenders. These WTA Power Rankings are not about who holds the highest ranking on paper, they are about who has the form, the history, and the specific ingredients that tend to matter most on the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5393,"featured_media":104243,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"no","_lmt_disable":"","sfio_featured_image":false,"sfio_embed_code":"","_ef_editorial_meta_date_first-draft-date":"","_ef_editorial_meta_paragraph_assignment":"","_ef_editorial_meta_checkbox_needs-photo":"","_ef_editorial_meta_number_word-count":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[2,5,9,4],"tags":[1766,2747,394,4315,42396,3535,3716,17703,2372,18273],"class_list":["post-104890","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-featured","category-french-open","category-news","category-wta","tag-aryna-sabalenka","tag-coco-gauff","tag-elina-svitolina","tag-iga-swiatek","tag-iva-jovic","tag-jessica-pegula","tag-karolina-muchova","tag-linda-noskova","tag-marta-kostyuk","tag-mirra-andreeva"],"modified_by":"Yesh Ginsburg","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/104890","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5393"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=104890"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/104890\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":104969,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/104890\/revisions\/104969"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/104243"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=104890"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=104890"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lastwordonsports.com\/tennis\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=104890"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}