PARIS — The French Open draw was conducted on Friday at noon here in the presence of defending champions Garbine Muguruza and Novak Djokovic.
Here’s a closer look at the men’s draw, that is headlined by world No1 Andy Murray and is without world No5 and reigning Australian Open champion Roger Federer.
Favourites
Rafael Nadal (ESP) [4]
Pretty much everyone’s favourite for the title in Paris after he swept through his first three tournaments of the clay-court season, winning Monte Carlo, Barcelona and Madrid before falling to an in-form Dominic Thiem in the Rome quarters. Will the pressure of seeking an unprecedented 10th French Open title catch up with Nadal?Dominic Thiem (AUT) [6]
The 23-year-old has the same number of match wins on clay this season as Nadal – 17. He won the title in Rio in February, then had a tremendous European clay stretch, making finals in Barcelona (beat Murray) and Madrid and semis in Rome (beat Nadal). Thiem reached the semi-finals in Paris last year and gives you the sense that he is very comfortable with his status as a top-10 player and a real contender for the title. Might have to get past both Djokovic AND Nadal though to reach the final, which is no mean feat.Novak Djokovic (SRB) [2]
The title holder has started to find his game with a decent run to the final in Rome (lost to Sascha Zverev) and with Andre Agassi in his corner, we can expect something special from the Serb this fortnight. If a reinvigorated passion is what Djokovic is looking for, then hanging out with one of the great legends of the game might do the trick. Looked sharp in his practice session with Grigor Dimitrov on Centre Court on Friday. His loss to Zverev in the Rome final however indicates he is still not at his best and has lots of work to do if he plans on defending his crown.
Alexander “Sascha” Zverev (GER) [9]
The 20-year-old German has officially arrived. He’s made his top-10 debut last Monday, thanks to his title triumph in Rome, beating Djokovic in the final nonetheless. At the French Open last season, his third round showdown with Thiem was dubbed as a sneak peek into the future. Well the future is a lot closer than we thought it was. Zverev lost to Thiem in four entertaining sets on Suzanne Lenglen last year and the world No10 has yet to reach the second week of a Slam. He has a legitimate chance of doing that this fortnight though with the highest seed in his section being a recently injured Kei Nishikori.
Stan is in the final in Geneva.
Stan Wawrinka (SUI) [3]
Playing Geneva the week before the French Open has done well for Wawrinka in the last two seasons. In 2015, Wawrinka won the Roland Garros title and he made semis last year. He said before that not coming to Paris early has helped him keep his mind off the stress of Grand Slam preparation. The world No3 is playing the final in his home city on Saturday and will have to make a quick turnaround in order to be ready for Paris. Considering he got the match wins he needed under his belt, he probably won’t mind it one bit.David Goffin (BEL) [10]
There’s a reason why Goffin is No5 in the Race to London at the moment. The Belgian is 29-11 this season and has four wins out of seven matches against top-10 opponents in 2017 – including a victory over Djokovic in Monte Carlo. Reached the quarters in Paris last year, as well as at the Australian Open this season. Is definitely a player not many want to face here at Roland Garros.Dark horses
Pablo Carreno Busta (ESP) [20]
The Spaniard won Estoril earlier this month and despite his indifferent results in Madrid and Rome, Carreno Busta has won as many matches as Nadal and Thiem on clay this season (17), having made the final in Rio and semis in Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo. Is in Milos Raonic and Grigor Dimitrov’s section of the draw and in the same quarter as Nadal.Albert Ramos-Vinolas (ESP) [19]
Many would be surprised to know that the winner of the most clay-court matches this season is not Rafael Nadal. It is in fact, Ramos-Vinolas, who has amassed 18 victories on the red dirt in 2017. A quarter-finalist in Paris last year, the Spaniard reached the final in Monte Carlo last month, taking out Murray in the process, before falling to the world No1 in a third-set tiebreak in the Barcelona quarters. Could be a tricky fourth round opponent for Djokovic.
Will we get a Djokovic-Thiem rematch?