Boisson ‘going for the dream’ at French Open after injury nightmare
PARIS: Lois Boisson has “resilience” tattooed above her right elbow and the 361st-ranked Frenchwoman demonstrated she had plenty as she stormed into semifinals of the French Open on Wednesday.
Boisson swept past world number six Mirra Andreeva in a thrilling two-set battle 7-6 (8/6), 6-3 in just over two hours on Court Philippe Chatrier.
The 22-year-old had already eliminated US third seed Jessica Pegula two days ago.
6 GAMES IN A ROW TO REACH THE SEMI-FINALS FOR LOIS BOISSON#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/MLPBookvlt
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
A wildcard entry, Boisson is making her Grand Slam debut in Paris after seriously injuring her left knee a week before Roland Garros 12 months ago.
On Wednesday, the French national anthem rang out in the crowd as Boisson and 18-year-old Andreeva warmed up.
“It gave me the chill, I have to say,” said Boisson. “But it was extraordinary to have the crowd supporting me so much.
“Even though sometimes it’s a bit raucous and there is a lot of noise between two points.”
Boisson had trailed 3-1 and 5-3 in the first set but saved set points to turn the match in her favor.
She kept her cool as last year’s semifinalist Andreeva unraveled from a 3-0 lead in the second set to win the last six games.
A frustrated Andreeva received a warning from the umpire for blasting the ball into the crowd. She was then booed when she argued with the umpire over a line call.
“Obviously I expected it,” said the Russian of the partisan home crowd.
“I think that in the first set I managed it pretty well.. but obviously with nerves and with pressure, it became a little harder.”
Andreeva struggled with the pressure, hitting nine double-faults in total, and made 43 unforced errors to


