The French Open courts are clay, a tricky surface for some. Here's how the pros do it | The BriefWire
The French Open courts are clay, a tricky surface for some. Here's how the pros do it
Published on 5/19/2026, 9:00:00 AM
Key points
The French Open courts are clay, a tricky surface for some.
Here's how the pros do it toggle caption Adam Pretty/Getty Images Europe The men's and women's qualifying rounds of the French Open started Monday, culminating a season of professional tennis on a surface that's notoriously challenging to compete on: clay.
The court at Roland-Garros, the stadium where the French Open is held, is a five-layer sandwich of various stones and coal residue, topped off with a thin layer of red brick dust.
The mixture can be unstable, as it can shift underfoot.
By comparison, hard courts have a resin or acrylic top coat that provides an even surface.
Quick context: The French Open courts are clay, a tricky surface for some.