In the Breakthrough RG Performance of 22-year-old French Chinese
Chris Oddo| @thefanchild | Thursday, June 5, 2025
Paris – Lois Boisson The 22-year-old French woman is in Paris’ rage after reaching the semifinals in her Grand Slam. The ground holder was unable to enter Chatrier on Wednesday, and the venue was filled with excitement as he watched the game flooded.
Boisson won the game dramatically against Mirra Andreeva on Wednesday, beaten 3-1 and 5-3 in the opening game before saving a fixed point in the first set circuit breaker. She then dropped from 3-0 from the second set to win the final six games, becoming the first French woman to reach the Paris semi-finals since 2011.
Boisson’s semi-finals is one of the most outstanding matches in Open-Era Grand Slam history, but it’s not over yet. She will face Coco Gauff in the final.
Here are some amazing statistics details that Francis natives have already made.
Lois Boisson.
Remember the name.#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/brvgyzydre
— Roland-Garros (@RolandGarros) June 4, 2025
After her victory, Boisson became the second player in the past 40 years to beat multiple top ten opponents in her Virgin Women’s Singles Grand Slam, following Monica Seles of Roland-Garros in 1989.
Boisson, the first player in the Open era to reach the women’s singles semifinals on the wildcards of Roland-Garros, could be the first wildcard grand slam finalist since Justine Henin since 2010 Australian Open.
Apart from the unqualified players, Lois Boisson is the lowest ranking in the women’s singles Grand Slam semifinals in the last 40 years (#361).
Boisson is the third player since 1980, making it to the semifinals with his virgin women’s singles Grand Slam MAIN DRAP after Monica Seles (Roland Garros 1989) and Jennifer Capriati (Roland Garros 1990).
Boisson played only two WTA-level matches before Roland-Garros, and he was the player with the least matches at the WTA before reaching her Virgin Grand Slam semifinals at the Open, equaling Elisabeth Ekblom at the 1976 Australian Open.