The best season of Hailey Baptiste's career came to a devastating halt on the Parisian clay. During her second-round match against Wang Xiyu, the 23-year-old American slipped on the court and landed awkwardly, immediately clutching her knee. She was wheeled off court in a wheelchair as the crowd fell silent.
Medical evaluations confirmed the worst: a torn anterior cruciate ligament and meniscus damage. Surgery is scheduled in the coming days, with her agent confirming a minimum six-month absence, effectively ending her 2026 season.
The timing could not have been more cruel. Baptiste had enjoyed a breakthrough spring, stunning world number one Aryna Sabalenka in the Madrid Open quarterfinals and saving two match points to defeat Barbora Krejcikova in the first round at Roland-Garros. She arrived in Paris with genuine ambitions of reaching the second week for the first time at a Grand Slam.
On social media, Baptiste shared her heartbreak openly. "The most heartbreaking end to the best season of my life. Still waiting to wake up from this," she wrote. In a follow-up post, she added: "In my head, all I can think is why, why, and why. Why me? Why now? And why like this?"
Wang Xiyu expressed her sadness at the post-match press conference, praising Baptiste's remarkable season and wishing her a speedy recovery. The WTA locker room has rallied around the American, who thanked her father, her team, and her inner circle for carrying her through "long and heavy days filled with bad news and uncontrollable tears."
At 23, Baptiste has time on her side. But the cruelty of this injury, striking at the very moment she proved she belonged among the best, leaves a bitter mark on a Roland-Garros edition already defined by dramatic twists.

