UK News
French Open 2026 quarter-finals: Svitolina v Kostyuk; Andreeva swats Cirstea aside – live | French Open 2026
Key events
And she unloads immediately, making 15-30, then hauling a backhand cross-court and on to the sideline, raising two break points. I like the loop she’s getting on her forehand, which is pushing Svitolina back, and when the defensive lob comes, she confidently spanks her overhead into the corner – as her opponent could not – to lead 2-0.
Behind in the first rally, Kostyuk tries a lob, not an especially good one … and Svitolina flaps her overhead long. A service winner follows, then a return hooked wide, and when the younger woman reads an attempted putaway, she’s able to direct a forehand winner cross-court to secure the love hold. That’s an impressive start for a player playing the most important match of her career, and I’d expect her to attack Svitolina’s serve and see how she reacts to the pressure.
Kostyuk will serve, ready … play.
Svitolina and Kostyuk are out, competing to become the first Ukrainian to reach the last four of this competition. Both of them are in terrific nick, Kostyuk with the bigger game and the higher ceiling, but for the same reason, the lower floor, while Svitolina has experience and equilibrium on her side. Now that you ask, I’m leaning Kostyuk, but Chrissy has gone Svito; I’ll leave it to you to decide which of the two of us knows more about tennis.
I especially enjoyed the cleanliness of Andreeva’s hitting – her timing today was beautiful, a facility of her confidence. She committed to her aggression from the first ball, but the question now is how that works against someone able to do likewise or turn it against her.
Coming up next: Elina Svitolina (7) v Marta Kostyuk (15).
Andreeva says it’s always tough against Cirstea – last time they played and also when they practise, as they’ve done a fair bit. She knew the match wouldn’t be easy and would take all her focus and intensity, against an opponent who’d look to be aggressive and pressure her whenever she could, so she’s glad she was able to get in first.
Fabrice tells her the first time he saw her play, aged 16, and he was very impressed with her understanding of the game, and she explains that she never learnt how to play, she was just always excited to be on court. She assumed everyone read the game and didn’t think the way she did it was anything special, she just always knew which decision to make, though sometimes when she’s nervous they’re not always good; today, though, everything was on point.
Asked why she thanks herself when she wins titles, she laughs that originally it was something she’d heard Snoop Dogg say when receiving an award, that she pinched as a gag, but now she thinks about it, she knows it’s true – you need to thank yourself for the work you do and sacrifices you make so she wants to tell herself every time.
Ultimately, if you can’t outhit Andreeva, you’ve got a very big problem, and Cirstea could not. Even so, the performance was close to perfect and felt like a step forward, destroying a wily, confident veteran with apparent ease; she’s growing in front of our eyes, the question now whether she can dominate against other members of the elite. I can’t wait to find out, and here she is…
Mirra Andreeva (8) beats Sorana Cirstea (18) 6-0 6-3
A majestic, mature performance from Andreeva, locked-in from the start and ruthless to the end, a forehand winner to the corner securing the win. She’s into her second grand slam semi and will face the winner of our next match between Svitolina and Kostyuk.
Cirstea knows the jig is bust, going for everything because what else can she do. But an error hands over 15-30 and a backhand winner down the line raises two match points.
Sure enough, Andreeva breaks to 15, and she’s enjoying herself out there. Her backhand, in particular, is a delightful shot, but it’s her footwork and ability to change pace and direction with her shots that makes her special; her tennis IQ has been there, more or less, since the start – it’s just about building the strength and experience to go with it. She breaks, consolidates, and at 6-0 5-3 is now a game away, Cirstea doing all she can, but powerless against the onslaught.
Cirstea, though, isn’t going away, making 0-30, then at 15-30 Andreeva comes in and stretches for a putaway, sending it wide. And though she saves the first break point with a backhand winner, she then nets a forehand and that’s the break back for 0-6 3-3. In comms, Chrissy points out that a dip was always likely because it’s not possible to play as well as Andreeva was for an entire match, and that’s true – though, at the same time, it’s impossible not to think about how ridiculously Sabalenka performed last evening, against a far superior opponent, and wonder if that’s what it’ll take to challenge the world no 1.
Andreeva’s ability to explode from the off is extremely impressive, a statement that tells Cirstea – and the rest of the field – that she’s ready, the serious stuff beginning now. Only the best can do that, cycling through the gears at will, and she holds easily then, from 15-all, plays a gorgeous half-volley that has Conchita Martinez, her coach, almost eating her own face in delighted smiles, then two definitive groundstrokes secure the break as if she’d simply decided it was time. This is very impressive behaviour, perhaps the most commanding i’ve ever seen her at this stage of a slam, and she leads 6-0 3-2.
If Cirstea can keep holding, the set’ll come down to a few points here and there, but up 40-15 she invites pressure by going long on the forehand … then closes out the game with a serve out wide and clean-up swing-volley. Andreeva leads 6-0 1-2.
This is, of course, a sad day for all ADHD-types – no longer can our eyes dart around three or four screens, various matches compartmentalised into various parts of brain, while merging into one in another. But what an opportunity to hyper-focus and fully immerse into what we hope will be a succession of epics … in which regard Cirstea has closed from 40-0 to 40-30 with the help of a lovely backhand winner and a double, then Andreeva goes long and do we got ourselves a ball-game? Er, well a forehand winner is followed by an ace – the umpire has to check the mark as both players thought it was wide – and we’re level at 1-1 in set two.
Ah, and Cirstea is on the board, a hold sparing her the embarrassment of a double bagel. But can she compete?
In the time since play started, Andreeva has imposed herself, a bagel set putting her in complete control; the roof is closed.
Preamble
Salut à tous et bienvenue à Roland-Garros 2026 – dixième jour!
On the one hand, we’ve only three singles matches in this session … and on the other, just look at them!
We saw Mirra Andreeva coming a mile off, a talent so luminous so young and technique so pretty, it was hard to believe she was only 15 … except she looked and acted like she was only 15, a cheeky, impetuous sprite with very obvious flaws. Now a venerable 19, the obvious flaws remain – we are who we are – and also, she’s much better at working with them – we create ourselves afresh every day. But is she ready to win a grand slam?
Her defensive inclination, the consequence of power yet to fully develop, is unlikely to undermine her against Sorana Cirstea, a veteran of composure and nous, but the matchup is no gimme. “There is no expiration date for ambition and for dreams,” Cirstea said after her fourth-round win, evidence of a burgeoning sense of mission – understandably so, given she’d just set a record for the longest gap between a player’s first two quarter-finals at a women’s singles major in the open era. We can be almost certain she won’t shrink, and if she can take away what Andreeva does best, denying her width, angle and backhands, she has a chance.
Following them on to court is a Ukrainian derby of affirming excitement. Elina Svitolina is a wonder of womanhood, taking time off to have a baby and returning an entirely different player: stronger, fresher and attacking her shots with the conviction of equilibrium. She knows she represents something bigger than herself – her family and her people – using emotion to elevate, and bringing the crowds with her.
Marta Kostyuk’s story is not dissimilar. The night before her round one match, a Russian bomb hit close to her family home and, like Svitolina, it’s taken her a while to find her identity as a player, struggling to assimilate her vast toolbox into the maelstrom of moments and the stress of elite sport. But she’s there now, unbeaten through the clay-court swing having won 15 matches in a row, her power, agility and brain synchronised into the very model of a modern major tenniser. She’s ready to win today and, for the first time, she’s ready to contest a semi-final and final.
We complete our day-sesh with le bangeur of a men’s match. After his undressing by Jannik Sinner in last year’s Aussie Open final, Alexander Zverev – the best player never to win a grand slam – clearly thought his time had gone and rightly so. But the absence of Carlos Alcaraz along with the exits of Sinner and Novak Djokovic mean he is now the overwhelming favourite, the chance of lifetime – one he surely thought he’d never get – bringing with it overwhelming pressure.
And Rafael Jodar will only compound that, the soaring 19-year-old unknown a year ago and now a serious force in the game – especially on clay. His forehand is terrifying and line backhand nasty, but even more apparent is his temperament: to get here, he’s won two five-setters in a row, riding the fluctuations and undulations with maturity and joy. We don’t know what he’s got left; we do know we’ll see absolutely all of it.
All of which is a long-winded way of saying we’re in for an absolute treat. Chauette! On y va!
UK News
Starmer urges calm as far right seeks to exploit Henry Nowak murder | Southampton
Politicians and community leaders have called for calm amid fears that the populist right is using the murder of Henry Nowak by a Sikh man to whip up racist resentment against minority ethnic Britons.
After Nigel Farage called for the public to respond with “pure, cold rage”, Keir Starmer condemned the Reform UK leader, saying Nowak’s family had explicitly asked that the case not be used to target particular communities.
Starmer said in a TV interview at Downing Street: “Nigel Farage is completely wrong to use this to try and create division. He would be wrong in any circumstances, but when Henry’s family are saying, ‘Please don’t do that, it’s our son’, then really, as politicians, as human beings, we should start where they start.”
Nowak, an 18-year-old university student, was fatally stabbed by Vickrum Digwa, 23, who used a Sikh dagger, in Southampton in December 2025.
Digwa falsely claimed he had been racially abused and attacked by Nowak. Body camera footage released by Hampshire police showed Nowak being handcuffed despite repeatedly telling police officers that he had been stabbed. At one point an officer tells him: “I don’t think you have, mate.”
The treatment of Nowak by police has been highlighted repeatedly during Digwa’s trial by US hard-right commentators, including Elon Musk, who have argued it shows “two-tier” policing in which accusations of racism are prioritised.
In what he described as an “emergency address” sent out via social media on Tuesday morning, Farage repeated this argument, warning that what he termed as an excessive focus on racial equality could lead to “the destruction of society”.
He said: “Enough of anti-white prejudice. A promotion of the idea that white lives matter just as much as black lives.” The phrase “white lives matter” originally emerged among US white nationalists as a riposte to the Black Lives Matter movement.
On Tuesday evening, a crowd of hundreds of people gathered outside Southampton police station after the far-right activist Tommy Robinson called on people to gather for a “Justice for Henry Nowak” protest.
Some chanted: “Racist police, off our streets” and “Shame on you”. They held up union flags and home-made signs including: “Henry’s blood is on your hands”, “Save our kids” and “Prison 4 police on scene”.
Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, accused Hampshire police of institutional racism and called for Digwa’s family to be forced out of Southampton. He said: “If Henry wasn’t white, he wouldn’t have been handcuffed. Henry could be your son.” Responding to the resignation of one of the police officers involved in the arrest, he said: “We want him in prison”.
Nick Tenconi, the leader of the UK Independence Party, led a prayer at the demonstration for Nowak as members of the crowd chanted: “Henry, Henry”. Tenconi said: “The arresting officers believed persecuting him [Nowak] was more important than saving him because he was white.” He added: “I am here to fight for an end to woke policing.”
Starmer said he found the bodycam footage of Nowak’s last moments “harrowing”, saying: “There are clearly serious questions that need to be addressed, not least, how accusations of racism inform the decision making in this case.”
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), the watchdog for police forces in England and Wales, is looking into the case, with Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, telling the Commons that she expected to see its report within three months.
Starmer said the IOPC must examine whether racial sensitivities played a part in the case, saying: “It is impossible to watch that footage and not appreciate that those questions absolutely have to be answered.”
An image of Henry Nowak’s handcuffed hand as he lay dying, taken from the bodycam footage, has been shared widely as a meme on social media, often by hard-right and far-right accounts, including many in the US.
In a joint statement, Sikh groups condemned what they called “a moment of madness” by one individual, saying that the wider Sikh community had since faced considerable abuse and hate.
Amandeep Singh, from the Sikh charity Basics of Sikhi, said many people had faced abuse: “At least 15 people have been accosted on the streets by collectives of white individuals surrounding Sikhs and asking, ‘Have you got a kirpan [the Sikh ceremonial dagger]?’, trying to stir up racial tensions.”
After recent incidents in which older Sikhs have had their turbans knocked off in racist assaults, many are fearful that the same might happen again, he said.
Andy Burnham called today for a potential change in police policy, while also warning against attempts to inflame tensions.
“There needs to be firstly a proper IOPC investigation, and coming from that, there would appear to me to be serious issues that will maybe need to be reflected in changing in policing practice,” the Greater Manchester mayor told the Guardian as he campaigned in the Makerfield byelection.
“But what I would say is I think the words of the family also need to be at the forefront of every politician’s mind in calling for there not to be an attempt to create further division.”
Answering questions in the Commons about the case, Mahmood told MPs that it was not “a moment to pit white Britons against non-white Britons”. She added that one police officer had been misidentified as being involved in the case, having to move out of his home after receiving death threats.
The Hampshire Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers in the force, condemned what it called attempts at “mob or vigilante justice”, including the publication of personal details of officers with no link to the case.
Also speaking in the Commons, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, the Labour MP for Slough, accused Farage and others of trying to “politicise people’s pain”. Saying he was deeply saddened at Nowak’s murder, he went on: “What’s very galling is that the likes of Reform, Restore, and the far right decided to politicise people’s pain, attacking the Sikh community for wearing the kirpan and wanting it banned.”
Although the murder weapon was described as a “large Sikh dagger” by the judge, academics have pointed out that the 21cm knife should not be confused with a kirpan, a small, symbolic knife, which was also worn by Digwa and many observant Sikhs.
Kemi Badenoch also condemned Farage’s address. “What Nigel Farage is doing is reinforcing the difference. We need to find what we have in common,” she said.
“Enough of this nonsense where we keep separating everybody and splitting people into different groups. We are descending into tribalism.”
The Guardian understands that the IOPC has found no indication of any disciplinary or criminal offence by the officers involved after six months of inquiries, after it was referred to the watchdog in December. Hampshire police said of four officers involved, three remained on full duties and one has resigned.
In remarks at Digwa’s sentencing on Monday, trial judge William Mousley imposed a term of life imprisonment with a minimum of 21 years. Today the attorney general’s office said it was considering whether Digwa’s sentence should be reviewed as too lenient, saying it had received “multiple requests” for this to happen.
Speaking outside the court, Nowak’s father, Mark Nowak, condemned what he called the “inhumane and degrading” treatment of his son by police, but added: “We do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred or tension. We want his story to help make our streets safer for everyone.”
The incident has already led police chiefs to review part of their anti-racism commitments, after shadow home secretary Chris Philp claimed language in the preamble to the NPCC’s Race Action Plan could lead to bias.
The line in question says the organisation’s commitment to racial equality “does not mean treating everyone ‘the same’ or being ‘colour blind’ (racial equality).” A source close to the home secretary said the wording was “clumsy”.
Chief constable Gavin Stephens, chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, said: “We are listening to legitimate concerns about how some of these commitments are worded or phrased, and where needed we can and will make changes, but this should not detract from the intent, which is to improve the quality of policing.”
UK News
Key moments of police bodycam footage
An 18-year-old Southampton student, Henry Nowak, was handcuffed after being stabbed by Vickrum Digwa, 23, who lied to police at the scene, claiming he had been the victim of a racist attack.
Digwa has been jailed for life with a minimum 21-year term.
Nowak’s parents said they hold Digwa solely responsible for the murder of their son, but the way he was treated by police was inhumane and degrading. Hampshire police has apologised to Henry’s family and the case has now been referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct.
BBC Verify has analysed bodycam footage that was released by the police, with the permission of Nowak’s family, and looked at the key moments before Henry Nowak’s death. Merlyn Thomas reports.
Additional reporting by Emma Pengelly. Produced by Tom Joyner. Graphics by Sally Nicholls.
UK News
England v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – live | Women’s cricket
Key events
16th over: India 140-4 (Harmanpreet 40, Sharma 14) Chase that! Harmanpreet takes a balletic step and flames Dean through the offside for four. But Deepti Sharma hasn’t got in the zone yet and is unable to reach the boundary with the same regularity.
15th over: India 132-4 (Harmanpreet 32, Sharma 12 The wind is really billowing the flags now. Deepti goes down the ground, but doesn’t get enough omphph on Smith to reach the rope. But Harmanpreet does – a mightly slap four four.
14th over: India 122-4 (Harmanpreet 29, Sharma 8) Gibson starts with a wide, but follows up with a couple of dots. She’s an energetic fielder off her own bowling, bounding left and right. India remain boundary-less untill Harmanpreet pulls Gibson’s last ball with some welly past the chasing fielder.
Stephen Nicols gets in touch to reply to Kevin Wilson (over five).
“I’m hoping there are a few more runs left in our batting line-up before we pension them all off. A chase of 200-ish tonight will be hard work, and more good prep for the batters before the World Cup. And I reckon we’ll need all the batting experience we can get for the Test Match at Lord’s.”
13th over: India 113-4 (Harmanpreet 22, Sharma 7) India are in danger of running into a boundary-less patch – as they did at Bristol. The sun is out now, but India can only milk five from Ecclestone.
12th over: India 108-4 (Harmanpreet 18, Sharma 5) Seven from Dean’s over, including a wide and a run-out chance – if Gibson had hit, Deepti could have been in trouble, diving and travelling like a truck through treacle. She is patched up.
11th over: India 101-4 (Harmanpreet 17, Sharma 1) Bell with the rebuild over and rebuild she does. Rodrigues had just pulled her for four before losing her timbers. Deepti Sharma leapfrogs the order to come in next.
WICKET! Rodrigues b Bell 29 (India 100-4)
Flummoxed by the slower ball, an advancing Rodrigues can only turn around to confirm her miserable fate. A delighted Bell punches the air.
10th over: India 94-3 (Rodrigues 24, Harmanpreet 16) Harmanpreet chomps into a short ball from Smith, thrashing it square past two diving England fielders, then dispatches the last offering before drinks for another four through point.
9th over: India 82-3 (Rodrigues 23, Harmanpreet 5) England can’t keep Rodrigues still in the crease, and her ceaseless movements gives her options. She ramps Gibson for four, then swots a short ball past a diving Smith for another.
Harmanpreet today overtakes Susie Bates as the most capped player in women’s cricket – with 368 games for India under her belt.
8th over: India 71-3 (Rodrigues 14, Harmanpreet 3) Harmanpreet and Rodrigues make for a stylish duo at the crease. A fistful of singles from Eclestone’s second over, then Rodrigues shimmies a wider final ball with dancing wrists to the backward point boundary.
7th over: India 63-3 (Rodrigues 8, Harmanpreet 1) Dani Gibson stops the flow of boundaries, and the run out of Bhatia could be crucial.
WICKET! Bhatia run out (Ecclestone) 32 (India 60-3)
Ecclestone with her left hand, a fishtail plait running down her back, runs out the lumbering Bhatia with a throw to the non-striker’s end . A vital wicket for England, Bhatia was in the zone
6th over: India 57-2 (Bhatia 32, Rodrigues 3) Bhatia signs off from the power play with three more boundaries, this time off Dean. An off-balanced sweep, a here-we-go up and over, and finally hammering her down the ground like a rogue nail
5th over: India 45-2 (Bhatia 20, Rodrigues 3) Bhatia, dealing mostly in boundaries this evening, slog-sweeps Ecclestone to pick up four. Four singles on top keeps the scoring rate perky.
Hello Kevin Wilson! “England probably decided a while back not to roll the dice before a home World Cup but they should probably move on from DWH, Knight, NSB and Jones after this tournament. The side has suffered from moving too many batters around in the past. Time to bring new players in, in fixed positions. I’m not sure I see a role for Gibson. England have plenty of batters who can bowl. Wong has been out of sorts for a while. Invest in Gaur instead.”
4th over: India 37-2 (Bhatia 9, Rodrigues 1) Dean makes the breakthrough in her first over – India are scoring quickly, but losing wickets.
WICKET! Mandhana lbw Dean 8 (India 36-2)
The dog changes the channel by leaping off the sofa with one paw on the controller, when I put it back on, India have appealed an lbw decision. Madhana had gone to sweep, it looks pretty out – even Mandhana looks like she thinks it is out – and out it is.
3rd over: India 31-1 (Mandhana 8, Bhatia 9) Two wides and two fours from Bell’s second over as she gets some punishment from Bhatia, through point and deep third.
WICKET! Verma c Dean b Smith 11 (India 19-1)
Verma is eager for more runs but cramped for room, gets an outside edge ball which holds up in the wind and Charlie Dean collects at point. Clever bowling
2nd over: India 19-1 (Mandhana 7, Bhatia 0) Linsey Smith in sunglasses from the other end. Mandhana clips her off her toes, over the leaping Bell at midwicket for four. Then Verma joins in hawking her through backward square for four more. But then the wicket!
1st over: India 10-0 (Mandhana 2, Verma 7) Lauren Bell directs the field at the top of her mark. The wind ruffles her shirt, the sun suddenly out and glinting on her bun as the church of St James looks on. Mandhana hoiks Bell up and just over mid on, but Verma earns the style points, delicately angling the ball down to the rope. A handful of singles and a wide.
“There’s a good crowd building,” says Raf. “I’m told they’re expecting at least 5,000 people which will be near capacity.”
Selection talk
Sky’s crew talk England selection for the World Cup – they put Capsey/Dunkley/Knight//Gibson/Wong/Corteen-Coleman and Filer up for discussion.
Charlie Dagnall. “I think Capsey accesses more areas of the field, can manipulate the surface a bit more, better against pace and spin, Dunkley is a little bit more one dimensional. Kate Cross agrees, “Capsey can hit areas of the ground where it needs to go, Dunkley doesn’t have that many more options than hitting over the top.”
Tash Farrant “Dunkley and Wyatt Hodge run really well together,I’d back her, tell her she needs to get off to a fast start. She does look quite tentative at the moment though.” She would pick Capsey and Dunkley and leave Knight out, also Capsey and Dunkley are better in the field and running quick singles.
Cross goes for Knight because you need experienced players, despite her lack of strike rate. “There is no space for anchors any more in the women’s game.”
Dagnall says he’d go for Knight as she’s a better player with NSB in the side.
Farrant says Edwards needs to be more flexible with the batting order.
Dunkley goes for Wong “a difference maker, a big game player.”
Farrant would pick Dani Gibson as England need to stack the batting. As would Cross who says Gibson is more of the future of England cricket than Wong.
And here comes Sue Redfern and the teams.
I’ve just disturbed Raf mid-forkful of white chocolate cheesecake in the Taunton media centre.
“We’ve watched two brilliant warm-up acts – we had drummers earlier and now we’ve got a group of dancers with Indian flags. Overcast and windy at the moment, but it’s been dry all afternoon.”
India XI
India make one change, seamer Kranti Gaud comes in for spinner Shreyanka Patil.
India: Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma, Yastika Bhatia, Harmanpreet Kaur (c), Jemimah Rodrigues (wk), Richa Ghosh, Deepti Sharma, Arundhati Reddy, Kranti Gaud, Sree Charani, Nandni Sharma.
England XI
No changes from Bristol.
England: Sophia Dunkley, Danni Wyatt-Hodge, Amy Jones (wk), Alice Capsey, Heather Knight, Freya Kemp, Danielle Gibson, Charlie Dean (c), Sophie Ecclestone, Linsey Smith, Lauren Bell.
England win the toss and bowl!
It’s blowy out there. Charlie Dean looks pleased. “The win at Bristol was brilliant for us, a confidence builder, hopefully we can do more of the same today.” England play the same team.
Preamble
Roll up, roll up for the final game in this T20 World Cup warm-up series. Happily for the crowd, it’s a decider with meaning, England and India both have a point in the purse – and the winner will take the momentum with them into the tournament proper. They’ll toss the coin at 6pm BST, with play starting half an hour later. Pull up a chair and join us!
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoWaitrose supermarkets across UK shut due to ‘critical error’
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoMan arrested in connection with rape in Oxfordshire town
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoBanbury woman jailed after lying to police about kidnapped children
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoHow to spend a day in Harpsden among UK’s poshest villages
-
Oxford Events3 weeks agoStage Watch: Somerset House enters the comedy arena with major new festival Laughterama
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoStrictly Come Dancing new hosts reportedly Emma Willis
-
Business & Technology4 weeks agoCBI posts 14% revenue rise as payment services grow
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoUK Hantavirus update as 22 ship passengers moved to hospital
