Roland Garros 2026 will be remembered as the edition of the next generation. While Mirra Andreeva and Flavio Cobolli lit up the senior draw, two teenagers left their mark on the junior finals: Russian-Czech Alisa Oktiabreva and Brazilian Luis Guto Miguel.
Oktiabreva, seventeen, dominated the girls'' final with a 6-2, 6-1 demolition of second seed Sun Xinran in just sixty-five minutes. Seeded twelfth, she struck twenty-nine winners to Sun''s thirteen and converted seven of her eight break points. "My mindset was just go for it. I tried to play as aggressively as possible," she said after the match.
Oktiabreva''s journey commands respect. Born in Russia and raised in the Czech Republic since the age of two, she overcame an ankle injury in 2023 and a wrist setback in 2025. This was her first junior tournament in three years, as she now focuses on the professional circuit where she sits at world No. 308 with a 15-5 record in 2026. An accomplished violinist who graduated from the Jana Deyla Conservatory in May 2026, she balances her time between the courts and her final school exams.
On the boys'' side, Guto Miguel wrote a historic chapter for Brazilian tennis. At seventeen, the tournament''s top seed defeated American Michael Antonius 6-3, 6-4 on Court Simonne-Mathieu in one hour and fifteen minutes. No Brazilian had ever won the boys'' singles title at Roland Garros. Edison Mandarino, Thomaz Koch, and Luis Felipe Tavares had all fallen in the final before him.
Comparisons with Joao Fonseca, who claimed the US Open junior title in 2023, are inevitable. Two Brazilian talents crowned at junior Grand Slams three years apart sends a strong signal for South American tennis. But the comparison should remain measured: Fonseca''s senior rise is his own story, and Miguel still has to build his professional career step by step.
Brazil can dream, though. Gustavo Kuerten won the junior doubles here in 1994 before conquering three senior titles at Roland Garros. History does not always repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes.


