World number two Elena Rybakina reacts to shock second round exit at French Open

World number two Elena Rybakina reacts to shock second round exit at French Open

Elena Rybakina cut a disappointed figure after she was knocked out of the 2026 French Open in just the second round on Wednesday.

Tipped as one of the favourites to win this year's title at Roland Garros, the world No 2 started the tournament with a confident 6-2, 6-2 win over Veronika Erjavec to set up a second-round clash with world 55 Yuliia Starodubtseva.

And it all went according to plan for the two-time Grand Slam winner early on as she comfortably won the opening set, but then collapsed in the second set as Starodubtseva won the first five games before she got on the board, only for the Ukrainian to serve it out.

Rybakina's struggles continued early in the decider as she was once again broken twice to 0-3 down, but finally found some rhythm as she claimed one break back in game four before getting back on serve in game eight.

But Starodubtseva dominated the tie-breaker and sealed the match for a famous 3-6, 6-1, 7-6 (10-4) victory. What added to the intrigue was her coach Stefano Vukov, who was not in her player's box for the crucial latter stages of her match. A journalist asked her during the post-match conference: "Was Stefano there today or was he did he leave in the middle? There's some question as to what happened."

Rybakina was clearly unimpressed by the question as she gave an explanation for Vukov's early departure.

"I'm not surprised that these questions are coming from you. Yes, he was at the match and he left because he was feeling really bad for the past few days. So he told me that 'I might leave'. He tried to stay but he was not feeling great and it was not a surprise. We talked about it, so nothing from that side.

"They [coaching team] were just trying to tell me to raise my energy, try to push more with the legs since the ball is flying so much, even on the simple balls, which you feel like coming not so fast, the ball bounces so high that you need to really force the wrist. You need to play with fast hands.

"Today it was not enough from my side. So even when I was not really attacking the ball, I was trying to keep it in play. I had too many mistakes."

Meanwhile, Starodubtseva was elated.

"Honestly, it's hard to describe, I'm super happy," she said after the match.

"Elena is one of the top players. She's had an incredible year. I'm super proud of myself that I was able to do this. It was a hard third set, but I got it done."

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