G’day from Roland Garros,
Firstly, this is a true story. 😀🇫🇷🎾
Over the past few years, I have worked with French player Carole Monnet and her coach, Hervé Romain. Carole is currently ranked #196 in singles and #193 in doubles.
My son, Rourke, and I watched Carole’s Roland Garros round-one qualifying match (Mon May 18), where she battled hard against Polina Iatcenko, to win 6-4, 4-6, 7-6(4), on court six. Carole hit 23 forehand winners and won 19/33 (58%) at net. Carole employs an aggressive game style and likes to go toe-to-toe from the baseline against opponents. It’s a power-baseline game.
Two days later, Carole was scheduled to play her second round of qualifying on Court Suzanne Lenglen against a player I had never heard of before.
Her name is Maja Chawalinska.
Rourke and I sat down and watched the players warm up. Carole was hitting the ball well and looked to be ready for the battle. My attention then went to her opponent. She was a lefty. She moved well. Lots of small steps. Strokes looked clean. Instantly impressive.
I kept watching Maja. And with each successive shot she hit in the warm-up, I became more and more entranced with her game. A few more shots and I was locked in. A few more shots, and my jaw was on the ground. She hadn’t missed a shot. Not one. Her strokes were so clean, her preparation so on point, that her errors were going to be few and far between.
Carole was going to have a real battle on her hands. Carole likes to hit big, and she likes opponents to hit big with her. She likes the ball hard off her hips. She was not going to be fed that ball at all vs. Maja.
Then I turned to my 19-year-old son and said something so completely preposterous that he just laughed.
I told Rourke that Maja was going to win the tournament – while they were still warming up.
He thought I was crazy. He thought I meant that she would make it through qualifying to the main draw. No, I said. She was going to win Roland Garros. The whole enchilada.
Maja won the first five points against Carole and 18 of the first 21. She made her first error of the match on the 21st point. She lost six points in six games in Set one. Carole didn’t see a ball that she could devour.
Maja is now in the semi-finals and will play 22-year-old Diana Shnaider (seeded 25) for a spot in the final.
Dream run. Dream draw. Here are her 2026 Roland Garros results to the semi -finals.
- Q1 def. A. Rame 6-0, 6-3
- Q2 def. C. Monnet 6-0, 6-1
- Q3 def. S. Lamens 7-6(4), 7-5
- Rd 1 def. Q Zheng 6-4, 6-0
- Rd 2 def. E, Mertens 6-4, 6-0
- Rd 3 def. M. Sakkari 1-6, 6-3, 6-2
- Rd 4 def. D. Parry 6-3, 6-2
- Qtr def. A. Kalinskaya 7-6(3), 6-3
IMPROVE YOUR ODDS OF HOLDING SERVE
Webinar 3: Serve Strategy And Patterns
Webinar 21: Serve And Volley / Return And Volley
Webinar 34: The Eight Serve Locations
Webinar 54: First Point Of The Game
So what did I see in the warm-up that led me to make such a bold (crazy) prediction? Five things.
1) Forehands – Shape Of The Ball
Maja prepares her racket back high to get above the ball. She does this so she can easily drop under it and rip up the back of the ball at contact. Her typical forehands are way, wayyy away from the net with massive rotation. That makes for a big rainbow arc of the shot. It makes it almost impossible to step into. Opponents are regularly making contact above their head, where they can’t hurt her at all.
Maja’s forehand dominates her matches. She uses her forehand to set a perfect trap at the start of the point. By going so high and heavy, opponents step back to let it drop. They step back to a part of the court where offense is basically impossible.
Maja sees them step back, and she moves forward accordingly. If they try to go heavy against her, she moves forward and hits a plethora of drop volleys that opponents have no chance to reach from back in the court.
She baits you. Then she uses deft touch to destroy your legs and lungs.
2) Backhand Slice
It’s a machete. It’s violent and aggressive. She cuts down hard on the ball and creates impressive rotation. Depending on the angle at which she attacks the ball, she can make it go fast and straight like a frozen rope or slow down significantly so the opponent has nothing to work with. The first and second bounce are close together near the baseline.
Maja uses it to cut opponents to pieces. The ball is either way above your strike zone from her forehand or way below your strike zone from her backhand. Good luck with that.
3) Drop Shots
Maja wins the mental battle of shot selection against opponents. She watches everything you do. She sees you lean backward, and that’s the beginning of the end. Her shot selection is incredibly impressive. She reads your balance. She reads your footwork. And then she expertly exploits it.
She hits drop shots with savage backspin. Sometimes the ball goes sideways after barely clearing the net. Opponents try to chase it down, but they are only wearing themselves out. The rich, red Roland Garros clay courts stop her drop shots on a dime.
4) Net Play
Maja plays with incredible touch – especially at the net.
Most of her volleys are touch volleys. Soft volleys hit so opponents who are already pushed well behind the baseline can’t possibly run them down. Maja comes in with heavy lefty forehands that pull opponents off the court. The knock-off volley is the last nail in the coffin. Maja’s volley technique is simple and impressive. She can stick a volley if needed, but most of the time she just takes off power and watches opponents flail, trying to chase it down.
And then there are the potent swinging volleys to quickly get the ball past the opponent.
5) Positive And Calm
Her aura is calm. Her footwork is fast and furious, but her face is always positive and stress-free. She doesn’t get rattled and fixate on her coach’s box, asking for help. She walks confidently from point to point with her racket up. You can tell she is absorbing information from the previous point to use against her opponents on the next point.
She has Roger Federer energy. It’s cool, calm, and collected. She believes, and she does not have to go over the top with her energy all the time. There is no bluff. There is simply a confident assassin plotting the downfall of her latest opponent.
Maja made a believer out of me just watching the warm-up against Carole. Carole didn’t play badly. Maja simply took the match out of her hands.
