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Edition of 06:00 CETFriday, 12 June 2026
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Tuesday, 2 June 2026 · Edition of 20:00 CET

Tearful Kostyuk Makes History at Roland-Garros, Then Denounces Russian Players’ War Silence

Marta Kostyuk dedicated her historic French Open semi-final run to Ukraine after deadly Russian strikes, then rebuked Russian players for their silence as she prepares to face Mirra Andreeva.

Sport7 outlets3 languages2 min readUpd. 05:59

The Roland-Garros quarter-final between two Ukrainian women carried the weight of a nation still under bombardment. Within hours of Russian missiles killing civilians in Kyiv and Kharkiv, Marta Kostyuk stepped onto Court Philippe-Chatrier and beat compatriot Elina Svitolina 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, becoming the first Ukrainian woman to reach the singles semi-finals in Paris. Tears streamed down her face during the on-court interview as she said, “We had a difficult night in Kyiv, so many dead. I dedicate this match to the Ukrainian people and their resilience. Slava Ukraini.” The crowd rose in applause, a moment noted from European press boxes to Hebrew-language dailies as transcending sport.\n\nAfterwards, she turned her anguish into an indictment of her peers. “There is a way [for Russian players to speak out] if you don’t agree,” she said, citing Daria Kasatkina’s decision to switch allegiance to Australia as proof that silence is a choice. Australian media highlighted that Kostyuk’s attack was not blanket: she praised Kasatkina’s defiance while condemning the majority who, she argued, have revealed “whose side they are on” after four years of war. Viewed from Kyiv, the distinction matters—it refuses false moral equivalence and draws a line between complicity and courage.\n\nThe stage is now set for a semi-final against 17-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva, a repeat of their Madrid final one month ago. Kostyuk leads their head-to-head 2-0 and is unbeaten on clay this season, having lifted titles in Rouen and Madrid. In their last meeting she declined to shake hands—a consistent gesture by Ukrainian players against Russian or Belarusian opponents—and the political charge will be inescapable. Analysts in London note that the war has turned even routine tour matches into referendums, and a Grand Slam semi-final amplifies the scrutiny.\n\nThe broader narrative is of a sport struggling to reconcile high-minded neutrality with the real bloodshed its silence can abet. While tennis authorities have allowed Russian and Belarusian players to compete as neutrals, Kostyuk and her peers have become reluctant diplomats, their every victory a counter-narrative. The Italian press captured the emotional texture of Tuesday’s play, one correspondent noting that reading of the overnight attack hours before the match made Kostyuk’s dedication all the more piercing. As she bids for a first major final, Kostyuk carries not just a racket but a cause.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa atlantica / anglosfera · sicurezzaStampa israelianaStampa europea continentale · mediterraneaStampa giapponese-coreana
Stampa atlantica / anglosfera/ sicurezzaindignazioneurgenzavittimismo

After a night of Russian strikes killing civilians, tearful Marta Kostyuk reaches the French Open semi-final and demands that Russian players break their silence. She frames her victory as Ukraine's win, citing Daria Kasatkina's switch to Australia as proof that speaking out is possible.

Stampa israelianavittimismoindignazione

Kostyuk tearfully dedicates her quarter-final win to the Ukrainian people, recalling the deadly night of shelling in Kyiv. The all-Ukrainian clash with Svitolina becomes a stage for national grief, setting up a semi-final against Russia's Mirra Andreeva.

Stampa europea continentale/ mediterraneaindignazionevittimismo

Kostyuk's semi-final run unfolds against the backdrop of a Russian strike that killed eighteen civilians, a child among them. Her tears after beating Svitolina become a collective lament for a nation under attack, blending sport and war into a single moment of emotion.

Stampa giapponese-coreanadistaccoscetticismo

Roland Garros turns into a geopolitical chessboard as Ukraine's Kostyuk meets Russia's Andreeva in a semi-final heavy with the shadow of the invasion. The war, now in its fifth year, hangs over every match, infusing the draw with unavoidable political friction.

This story appeared in

7 sources · 3 languages · 24h window

The Sydney Morning HeraldJun 2, 22:47
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)Jun 3, 02:53
HaaretzJun 2, 20:32
Le DevoirJun 3, 02:53
La RepubblicaJun 2, 21:47
The Japan TimesJun 3, 05:13
The IndependentJun 3, 05:11