It’s only the first round in Paris, but Victoria Mboko is already playing like she has something to prove and nobody seems able to slow her down.
The 19-year-old Congolese-Canadian rising star delivered a statement performance at Roland Garros 2026, brushing aside Czech qualifier Nikola Bartůňková 6-1, 6-2 in just 69 minutes to book her place in the second round of the French Open.
And honestly, it was never really in doubt once she found her rhythm.
Mboko entered the tournament as the No. 9 seed, fresh off a strong run to the Strasbourg International final, and she brought that same momentum straight onto the Paris clay. Calm, composed, and almost clinical in execution, she quickly turned a competitive opening into a one-sided showcase.
Bartůňková actually opened the match with a moment of resistance, holding serve with a sharp forehand winner. But that was about as far as the story went for her.
From there, Mboko flipped the switch.
She reeled off six straight games to take the first set in just over half an hour, controlling rallies with smart placement and aggressive shot selection that kept her opponent constantly stretched. By the time the set closed, she had already landed 12 winners and set the tone for what was coming next.
The second set followed a similar script, with Bartůňková attempting to apply pressure early — only for Mboko to immediately respond with a counter-break that shut the door on any momentum shift.
From 3-2, Mboko tightened her grip even further, breaking again before sealing the match with an ace that felt almost symbolic of how in control she had been all afternoon. She finished with 22 winners and converted 6 of 10 break points, a clean, efficient stat line that matched the eye test perfectly.
With this win, Mboko moves into the second round and sits just one victory away from matching her third-round run from her Roland Garros debut last year. Next up is a much tougher test: Czech veteran and two-time Olympic champion Kateřina Siniaková.
And if this first match is anything to go by, Paris might need to start paying closer attention.

