Stat-tastic: What's at stake after four rounds in Paris?

Numbers in the books and milestones on the horizon ahead of the quarter-finals

Novak Djokovic, Roland-Garros 2025, third round©Loïc Wacziak / FFT
 - Chris Oddo

The first four rounds are behind us in Paris, and the quarter-finals commence on Tuesday. 

Join us for a by-the-numbers look at some standout statistics from the first nine days of Roland-Garros 2025.

100, then 25, at 38?

Novak Djokovic joined Rafael Nadal as one of two men to have reached the Roland-Garros century mark in match wins. Djokovic (100-16) is 12 wins shy of the King of Clay (112-4).

But he’s not shy in the Grand Slam titles department. The Grand Slam King is three victories away from a record 25th major, ahead of his quarter-final clash with Alexander Zverev on Day 11.

The Serbian legend defeated Cameron Norrie on Day 9 to stretch his current winning streak to eight victories; he has also won 21 consecutive matches on the Parisian clay.

Djokovic has not lost at Roland-Garros since being defeated by Nadal in the 2022 quarter-finals. In 2024, he gave a walkover to Casper Ruud after injuring his knee in his fourth-round win over Francisco Cerundolo

Last but not least, this nugget on the 38-year-old: Djokovic is the oldest quarter-finalist at Roland-Garros since 1971, and would set the record as the oldest men's singles Grand Slam champion in history if he wins the title.

Iga Swiatek prepares R4 RG2025©Philippe Montigny / FFT

Three more for 4

Iga Swiatek is bidding to become the first woman in Open era history to win Roland-Garros four consecutive years. The Pole, who has logged 25 consecutive women’s singles victories at the event, will face Elina Svitolina in the quarter-finals on Tuesday as she continues her quest for a fifth Roland-Garros title. 

Twenty-four-year-old Swiatek has won 39 of 41 career matches at Roland-Garros.

Loïs Boisson / Huitièmes de finale, Roland-Garros 2025©Clément Mahoudeau / FFT

361, not done!

The biggest upset of Roland-Garros is fresh off the presses at Roland-Garros! Lois Boisson defeated third-seeded Jessica Pegula on Monday on Court Philippe-Chatrier to become the lowest-ranked French player to defeat a top-10 opponent at WTA level in the last 40 years.

Boisson, 22, is the lowest-ranked player to reach a major quarter-final without a protected ranking in 40 years as well.

She's the only unseeded quarter-finalist on the women's side this year.

Andreeva blossoming

In her ninth career appearance at a Grand Slam – and third in Paris – Mirra Andreeva continues to surpass expectations. The 18-year-old defeated Daria Kasatkina on Day 9 to become the youngest player to reach back-to-back quarter-finals at Roland-Garros since 16-year-old Martina Hingis achieved the feat in 1997-1998.

Jannik Sinner Roland-Garros 2025 troisieme tour©Julien Crosnier / FFT

Winning in bunches

Several players are riding notable winning streaks into the quarter-finals in Paris. 

Jannik Sinner has won each of his last 18 matches at the majors, a streak that dates back to his title run at the 2024 US Open. 

In fact, both of this year’s Australian Open champions have won their first 11 Grand Slam matches of the season, as Sinner and Madison Keys continue to make a bid for the Calendar Slam in 2025.

Defending men's and women's singles champion Carlos Alcaraz has won his last 11 matches at Roland-Garros.

Match point mavens

Two players – Keys and Svitolina – have saved match points en route to the quarter-finals. Keys saved three to defeat Sofia Kenin in the third round, while Svitolina saved a trio against Jasmine Paolini in the round of 16. 

Only four women – Anastasia Myskina (2004), Justine Henin (2005), Barbora Krejcikova (2021) and Iga Swiatek (2024) – have won Roland-Garros after saving a match point previously in the tournament in the Open era.

Coco Gauff R4 RG2025©Loïc Wacziak / FFT

Scorching returns

Coco Gauff has put up unthinkable service return numbers through four rounds at Roland-Garros. The American has broken serve in 25 of 35 return games, and won 61 of 78 second-serve return points (an insane 78 percent!) to lead all players – male or female – by far.