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2025 French Open

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2025 tennis tournament held in Paris, France
Tennis tournament
2025 French Open
Date25 May – 8 June 2025
Edition124th (95th Grand Slam)
CategoryGrand Slam
Prize money56,352,000
SurfaceClay
LocationParis (XVIe), France
VenueRoland Garros Stadium
Champions
Men's singles
SpainCarlos Alcaraz
Women's singles
United StatesCoco Gauff
Men's doubles
SpainMarcel Granollers /ArgentinaHoracio Zeballos
Women's doubles
ItalySara Errani /ItalyJasmine Paolini
Mixed doubles
ItalySara Errani /ItalyAndrea Vavassori
Wheelchair men's singles
JapanTokito Oda
Wheelchair women's singles
JapanYui Kamiji
Wheelchair quad singles
IsraelGuy Sasson
Wheelchair men's doubles
United KingdomAlfie Hewett /United KingdomGordon Reid
Wheelchair women's doubles
JapanYui Kamiji /South AfricaKgothatso Montjane
Wheelchair quad doubles
IsraelGuy Sasson /NetherlandsNiels Vink
Boys' singles
GermanyNiels McDonald
Girls' singles
AustriaLilli Tagger
Boys' doubles
FinlandOskari Paldanius /PolandAlan Ważny
Girls' doubles
GermanyEva Bennemann /GermanySonja Zhenikhova
Wheelchair boys' singles
Austria Maximilian Taucher
Wheelchair girls' singles
BrazilVitória Miranda
Wheelchair boys' doubles
United States Charlie Cooper /Austria Maximilian Taucher
Wheelchair girls' doubles
Belgium Luna Gryp /BrazilVitória Miranda
← 2024 ·
· 2026 →

The2025French Open was amajor tennis tournament that was played on outdoorclay courts and held at theStade Roland Garros inParis,France, from 25 May to 8 June 2025,[1][2][3] comprising singles, doubles, mixed doubles play, junior and wheelchair tournaments.

Carlos Alcaraz defended his title in men's singles by defeating world No. 1Jannik Sinnerin the final, which lasted five hours and twenty nine minutes, the longest final in the tournament's history. It was his second French Open title and fifth major.[4]Coco Gauff defeated the world No. 1Aryna Sabalenka in the women's singles to win her first French Open and second major title.[5]Iga Świątek was the three-time defending champion but lost to Sabalenka in the semifinals.[6]

It was the 124th edition of theFrench Open and the second major tournament of 2025. The main singles draws included 16 qualifiers for men and 16 for women out of 128 players in each draw.

Tournament

[edit]
Court Philippe Chatrier in 2023, where the finals of the French Open take place.

The 2025 French Open was the 124th edition of the French Open and was held at theStade Roland Garros inParis.

It was the first major since the2013 US Open in which the world's top two players contested the final of both the women's and men's singles events, and the first at the French Open since1984.[7][8]

Special events

[edit]

At the start of the clay-court tournament, the organizers paid tribute to former Spanish tennis playerRafael Nadal for being the tournament's most successful player and for also winning his first of 14 singles trophies in2005, 20 years before.[9][10]

Commemorative plaque to Rafael Nadal unveiled during a tribute at Roland Garros in 2025

After his loss againstJannik Sinner at the second round of the singles competition,Richard Gasquet ended his career as a professional tennis player and was honored by the French Open's organizers with a commemorative trophy.[11][12][13]

Richard Gasquet receiving a commemorative trophy during a ceremony in honor of his career at the 2025 French Open

Singles players

[edit]
Men's singles players
ChampionRunner-up
SpainCarlos Alcaraz [2]ItalyJannik Sinner [1]
Semifinals out
SerbiaNovak Djokovic [6]ItalyLorenzo Musetti [8]
Quarterfinals out
KazakhstanAlexander BublikGermanyAlexander Zverev [3]United StatesFrances Tiafoe [15]United StatesTommy Paul [12]
4th round out
Andrey Rublev [17]United KingdomJack Draper [5]NetherlandsTallon GriekspoorUnited KingdomCameron Norrie
DenmarkHolger Rune [10]GermanyDaniel AltmaierAustraliaAlexei Popyrin [25]United StatesBen Shelton [13]
3rd round out
Czech RepublicJiří LehečkaFranceArthur Fils [14]PortugalHenrique Rocha (Q)BrazilJoão Fonseca
ItalyFlavio CobolliUnited StatesEthan Quinn (Q)United KingdomJacob FearnleyAustriaFilip Misolic (Q)
ArgentinaMariano NavoneFranceQuentin HalysUnited StatesSebastian Korda [23]SerbiaHamad Medjedovic
PortugalNuno BorgesKaren Khachanov [24]ItalyMatteo Gigante (Q)Bosnia and HerzegovinaDamir Džumhur
2nd round out
FranceRichard Gasquet (WC)SpainAlejandro Davidovich Fokina [26]AustraliaAdam WaltonSpainJaume Munar
AustraliaAlex de Minaur [9]Czech RepublicJakub Menšík [19]FrancePierre-Hugues Herbert (WC)FranceGaël Monfils
NetherlandsJesper de JongItalyMatteo ArnaldiCanadaGabriel DialloKazakhstanAlexander Shevchenko (LL)
ArgentinaFederico Agustín Gómez (LL)FranceUgo Humbert [22]CanadaDenis Shapovalov [27]FranceCorentin Moutet
ColombiaDaniel Elahi Galán (LL)United StatesReilly Opelka (PR)SerbiaMiomir KecmanovićUnited StatesEmilio Nava (WC)
SpainPablo Carreño BustaUnited StatesJenson Brooksby (PR)ArgentinaJuan Manuel Cerúndolo (Q)Czech RepublicVít Kopřiva
NorwayCasper Ruud [7]ChileAlejandro TabiloAustriaSebastian Ofner (PR)HungaryMárton Fucsovics
FranceHugo GastonGreeceStefanos Tsitsipas [20]FranceGiovanni Mpetshi Perricard [31]HungaryFábián Marozsán
1st round out
FranceArthur RinderknechFranceTérence Atmane (WC)AustraliaJordan ThompsonSpainPablo Llamas Ruiz (Q)
South AfricaLloyd Harris (Q)GermanyMaximilian Marterer (Q)ArgentinaCamilo Ugo CarabelliChileNicolás Jarry
SerbiaLaslo DjereAustraliaJames DuckworthGeorgia (country)Nikoloz Basilashvili (Q)FranceAlexandre Müller
PolandHubert Hurkacz [30]FranceBenjamin BonziBoliviaHugo DellienItalyMattia Bellucci
United StatesLearner TienItalyFrancesco PassaroCroatiaMarin Čilić (LL)CanadaFélix Auger-Aliassime [29]
ArgentinaFrancisco Cerúndolo [18]United StatesMarcos GironSerbiaDušan LajovićBulgariaGrigor Dimitrov [16]
Daniil Medvedev [11]United StatesAleksandar KovacevicSwitzerlandStan Wawrinka (WC)AustraliaChristopher O'Connell
SpainPedro MartínezChinaBu YunchaoketeFranceClément Tabur (Q)United StatesMackenzie McDonald
GermanyYannick Hanfmann (Q)FranceValentin Royer (WC)AustraliaRinky HijikataUnited StatesBrandon Nakashima [28]
Czech RepublicTomáš Macháč [21]ArgentinaSebastián BáezNetherlandsBotic van de ZandschulpSpainRoberto Bautista Agut
Roman SafiullinArgentinaFrancisco ComesañaPortugalJaime FariaItalyLuciano Darderi
United StatesAlex Michelsen [32]PolandKamil MajchrzakBrazilThiago MonteiroUnited StatesTaylor Fritz [4]
SpainAlbert Ramos Viñolas (Q)FranceKyrian Jacquet (Q)FranceArthur Cazaux (WC)JapanYoshihito Nishioka
AustraliaAleksandar VukicGermanyJan-Lennard StruffAustraliaTristan Schoolkate (WC)DenmarkElmer Møller (LL)
ItalyLorenzo SonegoFranceUgo Blanchet (Q)LebanonBenjamin Hassan (Q)ArgentinaTomás Martín Etcheverry
BelgiumZizou BergsArgentinaThiago Agustín Tirante (LL)ItalyLuca NardiItalyGiulio Zeppieri (Q)
Women's singles players
ChampionRunner-up
United StatesCoco Gauff [2]Aryna Sabalenka [1]
Semifinals out
PolandIga Świątek [5]FranceLoïs Boisson (WC)
Quarterfinals out
ChinaZheng Qinwen [8]UkraineElina Svitolina [13]Mirra Andreeva [6]United StatesMadison Keys [7]
4th round out
United StatesAmanda Anisimova [16]Liudmila Samsonova [19]ItalyJasmine Paolini [4]KazakhstanElena Rybakina [12]
AustraliaDaria Kasatkina [17]United StatesJessica Pegula [3]United StatesHailey BaptisteEkaterina Alexandrova [20]
3rd round out
SerbiaOlga DanilovićDenmarkClara Tauson [22]UkraineDayana YastremskaCanadaVictoria Mboko (Q)
UkraineYuliia Starodubtseva (LL)United StatesBernarda PeraLatviaJeļena Ostapenko [21]RomaniaJaqueline Cristian
KazakhstanYulia Putintseva [32]SpainPaula Badosa [10]FranceElsa Jacquemot (WC)Czech RepublicMarkéta Vondroušová
United StatesSofia Kenin [31]SpainJéssica Bouzas ManeiroVeronika KudermetovaCzech RepublicMarie Bouzková
2nd round out
SwitzerlandJil TeichmannUnited StatesDanielle CollinsNetherlandsArantxa RusSwitzerlandViktorija Golubic
Diana Shnaider [11]SpainLeyre Romero Gormaz (Q)GermanyEva LysColombiaEmiliana Arango
AustraliaAjla TomljanovićAnastasia PotapovaCroatiaDonna Vekić [18]HungaryAnna Bondár
United StatesIva Jovic (WC)United StatesCaroline DolehideCzech RepublicSára Bejlek (Q)United KingdomEmma Raducanu
United StatesAshlyn KruegerChinese TaipeiJoanna Garland (Q)FranceLéolia Jeanjean (WC)RomaniaElena-Gabriela Ruse
United StatesAlycia ParksUkraineAnhelina KalininaPolandMagdalena Fręch [25]United StatesAnn Li
United KingdomKatie BoulterVictoria AzarenkaJapanNao Hibino (Q)United StatesRobin Montgomery
Czech RepublicBarbora Krejčíková [15]ItalyElisabetta CocciarettoUnited KingdomSonay KartalCzech RepublicTereza Valentová (Q)
1st round out
Kamilla RakhimovaItalyLucrezia Stefanini (Q)United KingdomJodie Burrage (PR)CanadaLeylah Fernandez [27]
PolandMagda LinetteColombiaCamila OsorioCzech RepublicPetra Kvitová (PR)SerbiaNina Stojanović (Q)
UkraineAnastasiia Sobolieva (Q)AustraliaDestanee Aiava (WC)FranceTiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah (WC)EgyptMayar Sherif
United StatesPeyton Stearns [28]New ZealandLulu SunPhilippinesAlexandra EalaAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova
ChinaYuan YueAustraliaMaya JointGermanyTamara Korpatsch (Q)Czech RepublicLinda Nosková [29]
Anna BlinkovaFranceCaroline GarciaGermanyLaura SiegemundTurkeyZeynep Sönmez
ArgentinaJulia Riera (Q)MexicoRenata ZarazúaBelgiumGreet MinnenPolina Kudermetova
UkraineMarta Kostyuk [26]AustraliaKimberly BirrellChinaWang XinyuSlovakiaRebecca Šramková
SpainCristina BucșaNetherlandsSuzan LamensUnited StatesKatie VolynetsArgentinaSolana Sierra (Q)
Czech RepublicKateřina SiniakováRomaniaIrina-Camelia BeguUnited StatesMcCartney KesslerJapanNaomi Osaka
Czech RepublicKarolína Muchová [14]GreeceMaria SakkariArmeniaElina AvanesyanBelgiumElise Mertens [24]
TunisiaOns JabeurOksana Selekhmeteva (Q)ArgentinaMaría Lourdes Carlé (Q)RomaniaAnca Todoni
AustraliaDaria Saville (Q)FranceCarole Monnet (Q)BelgiumYanina Wickmayer (PR)FranceVarvara Gracheva
BrazilBeatriz Haddad Maia [23]JapanMoyuka UchijimaFranceDiane Parry (WC)United StatesEmma Navarro [9]
GermanyTatjana MariaBulgariaViktoriya TomovaUnited StatesTaylor Townsend (LL)ItalyLucia Bronzetti
Anna Kalinskaya [30]Erika AndreevaFranceChloé Paquet (WC)AustraliaOlivia Gadecki

Events

[edit]
See also:2025 French Open – Day-by-day summaries

Men's singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Men's singles

Defending championCarlos Alcaraz[14] defeatedJannik Sinner inthe final, 4–6, 6–7(4–7), 6–4, 7–6(7–3), 7–6(10–2) to win the men's singles tennis title.[15] It was his secondFrench Open title and fifthmajor title overall. Alcaraz came back from two sets down andsaved three consecutive championship points en route to the title, becoming the third man in theOpen Era to win a major after being championship points down in the final, followingGastón Gaudio at the2004 French Open andNovak Djokovic at the2019 Wimbledon Championships. Both players served for the championship (Sinner at 5–4 in the fourth set, Alcaraz at 5–4 in the fifth set), but both were broken.[16]

At 5 hours and 29 minutes, it was the longest French Open final in history (surpassing the1982 final),[17] and the second-longest major final overall, after the2012 Australian Open final. Alcaraz was the second man in the Open Era (afterRoger Federer) to win his first five major finals[18] and the second-youngest to win a fifth major, behind onlyBjörn Borg (at 22 years and 5 days) and tied withRafael Nadal (at exact same age of 22 years, 1 month and 3 days).[19] It was the first French Open singles final to be decided in a fifth-set tiebreak (after the tiebreak rule was added in 2022), and the first men's final at any major to be contested by two players born in the 2000s.[20] It was also the first time in grand slam history that a 10 points super tiebreaker decided a singles final since all 4 grand slams agreed to replace the advantage set format in the final set by a 10 points super tiebreaker in 2022.

Women's singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Women's singles

Coco Gauff defeatedAryna Sabalenka in the final, 6–7(5–7), 6–2, 6–4 to win the women's singles tennis title.[21] It was her firstFrench Open singles title and second major singles title overall. Gauff was the first American to win the title sinceSerena Williams in2015.[22] It was the first French Open final between the world No. 1 and 2 since2013, and the first at any major since the2018 Australian Open.[23] Sabalenka was the first woman to reach the final of three consecutive majors since Williams in 2016.[24]

Iga Świątek was the three-time defending champion,[25] but lost in the semifinals to Sabalenka.[26] The defeat ended her 26-match win streak in the event, second only toChris Evert's 29 consecutive wins.[27]

Ranked No. 361,Loïs Boisson was the first Frenchwoman to reach the singles semifinals of the French Open sinceMarion Bartoli in2011, and the first wildcard to do so in theOpen Era.[28] Boisson was only the third woman in the Open Era to reach the semifinals of a major on her singles main-draw debut, afterMonica Seles andJennifer Capriati at the1989 and1990 French Opens, respectively.[29]

The lack of women's matches being played at night at the French Open became a topic of discussion. 2025 was the second consecutive year that theFrench Tennis Federation did not schedule a women's singles match for a night session onCourt Philippe Chatrier.[30]Ons Jabeur said that it was unfortunate and wrote on social media that "honouring one side of the sport shouldn't mean ignoring the other. The women's game has been writing its own legacy loudly, brilliantly, and for far too long without too much recognition."Amélie Mauresmo, the tournament director of the French Open, said that the schedule was not meant to send a message that women were unworthy of playing at night and that the primary consideration for scheduling night sessions was the potential length of a match.[31][32]

Men's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Men's doubles

Women's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Women's doubles

Mixed doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Mixed doubles

Wheelchair men's singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair men's singles

Wheelchair women's singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair women's singles

Wheelchair quad singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair quad singles

Wheelchair men's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair men's doubles

Wheelchair women's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair women's doubles

Wheelchair quad doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair quad doubles

Boys' singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Boys' singles

Girls' singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Girls' singles

Boys' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Boys' doubles

Girls' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Girls' doubles

Wheelchair boys' singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair boys' singles
  • AustriaMaximilian Taucher defeatedUnited States Charlie Cooper 6–2, 7–6(7–3)

Wheelchair girls' singles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair girls' singles

Wheelchair boys' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair boys' doubles
  • United StatesCharlie Cooper /AustriaMaximilian Taucher defeatedBrazil Luiz Calixto /Belgium Alexander Lantermann 6–4, 6–0

Wheelchair girls' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2025 French Open – Wheelchair girls' doubles

Point distribution and prize money

[edit]

Point distribution

[edit]

Below is a series of tables for each competition showing the ranking points that were offered for each event.[33][34][35]

Senior points

[edit]
EventWFSFQFRound of 16Round of 32Round of 64Round of 128QQ3Q2Q1
Men's singles200013008004002001005010301680
Men's doubles1200720360180900N/A
Women's singles130078043024013070104030202
Women's doubles10N/A

Wheelchair points

[edit]
EventWFSFQFRound of 16
Singles800500375200100
Doubles800500375100N/A
Quad singles800500375200100
Quad doubles800500375100N/A

Junior points

[edit]
EventWFSFQFRound of 16Round of 32QQ3
Boys' singles1000700490300180902520
Girls' singles
Boys' doubles750525367225135N/A
Girls' doubles

Prize money

[edit]

The French Open total prize money for 2025 was56,352,000, an increase of 5.37% compared to 2024.[36]

EventWinnerFinalistSemifinalsQuarterfinalsRound of 16Round of 32Round of 64Round of 128Q3Q2Q1
Singles€2,550,000€1,275,000€690,000€440,000€265,000€168,000€117,000€78,000€43,000€29,500€21,000
Doubles1€590,000€295,000€148,000€80,000€43,500€27,500€17,500N/aN/aN/aN/a
Mixed doubles1€122,000€61,000€31,000€17,500€10,000€5,000N/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
Wheelchair singles€63,900€31,950€20,600€12,360€8,750N/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
Wheelchair doubles1€21,650€11,350€8,250€5,150N/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
Quad wheelchair singles€62,000€31,000€20,000€12,000N/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
Quad wheelchair doubles1€21,000€11,000€8,000N/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/aN/a
  • 1 Prize money for doubles is per team.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Provisional schedule 2025". Retrieved30 January 2025.
  2. ^"French 2025 dates".wtatennis.com. Retrieved2025-05-19.
  3. ^"French 2025 dates".atptour.com. Retrieved2025-05-19.
  4. ^"Carlos Alcaraz saves 3 championship points against Jannik Sinner, wins longest final in Roland Garros history | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved2025-06-09.
  5. ^"A champion's heart: Gauff defeats Sabalenka to win French Open".Women's Tennis Association. Retrieved2025-06-09.
  6. ^"World No. 1 Sabalenka dethrones Swiatek to reach first Roland Garros final".Women's Tennis Association. Retrieved2025-06-09.
  7. ^"French Open Makes 'Historic' Announcement Before Finals". 7 June 2025.
  8. ^@WTA (June 7, 2025)."😤 No.1 vs. No.2 😤 The last time the No.1 & No.2 seeds reached the Women's & Men's singles finals was at the 2013 US Open (Djokovic, Nadal, S. Williams & Azarenka). The last time this happened at #RolandGarros was in 1984 (McEnroe, Lendl, Navratilova & Evert)" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  9. ^"Roland-Garros 2025: 14-time champion Rafael Nadal on life after tennis - "I am trying to do things that entertain me"". Olympics.com. May 21, 2025. RetrievedMay 22, 2025.
  10. ^"Alcaraz and Swiatek say 'Merci, Rafa' in Nadal tribute".Women's Tennis Association. Retrieved2025-06-09.
  11. ^"Jannik Sinner ends Richard Gasquet's career, books Roland Garros R3 spot | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved2025-06-01.
  12. ^"Richard Gasquet thrilled with Roland Garros finale: 'It's the perfect end for me' | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved2025-06-01.
  13. ^"Richard Gasquet's final farewell: Bidding adieu to tennis' French artiste | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour. Retrieved2025-06-01.
  14. ^"Alcaraz: 'It doesn't matter what I've achieved if I now stand still'".ATP Tour. 10 June 2024.
  15. ^"How Carlos Alcaraz broke his own limits - and Jannik Sinner - to win astonishing French Open final".The Independent.
  16. ^Tignor, Steve (9 June 2025)."Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner played the match of the decade, and maybe the century, at Roland Garros".Tennis.com.
  17. ^"Alcaraz saves 3 championship points against Sinner, wins longest final in Roland Garros history".ATP Tour. 2 June 2025.
  18. ^Berkok, John (8 June 2025)."Carlos Alcaraz improves to 5-0 in Grand Slam finals, joins Roger Federer on exclusive list".Tennis.com.
  19. ^"Vamos! 25 amazing things Carlos Alcaraz achieved by winning 2025 Roland Garros".Tennis.com. 12 June 2025.
  20. ^"Sinner and Alcaraz thriller proves rivalry here to stay".BBC Sport. 8 June 2025.
  21. ^"Gauff beats Sabalenka to win French Open title". BBC Sport. 7 June 2025.
  22. ^"Coco Gauff Becomes First American Woman Since Serena Williams To Win French Open".Forbes.
  23. ^"Sabalenka vs. Gauff: Everything you need to know about the French Open final".WTA Tennis. 6 June 2025.
  24. ^"World No. 1 Sabalenka dethrones Swiatek to reach first Roland Garros final".WTA Tennis. 5 June 2025.
  25. ^Jacobs, Shahida (8 June 2024)."Incredible Iga Swiatek stats as Pole equals Serena Williams' rare feat with title run at Roland Garros".Tennis365.
  26. ^"Sabalenka takes out Swiatek to reach French Open final". BBC Sport. 5 June 2025.
  27. ^Richard Pagliaro (5 June 2025)."Dethroned: Sabalenka Stops Swiatek's Reign for First Roland Garros Final".Tennis Now.
  28. ^"Semifinal bound: Boisson's magical Roland Garros continues with Andreeva upset".WTA Tennis. 4 June 2025.
  29. ^"France's Lois Boisson entered Roland Garros as the world's No. 361 player. She's become the host nation's Cinderella story".CNN Sports. 4 June 2025.
  30. ^Rob Schaefer (10 June 2025)."Data drive: Midnight in Paris (or the lack thereof)". Sports Business Journal.
  31. ^Jonathan Jurejko (30 May 2025)."Women are 'worthy' of French Open night sessions". BBC Sport.
  32. ^Matthew Futterman (30 May 2025)."French Open night session snub not about quality of women's tennis, says Amélie Mauresmo".The Athletic.
  33. ^"ATP Releases Pepperstone ATP Rankings Breakdown Updates | ATP Tour | Tennis".ATP Tour.
  34. ^"2024 WTA RANKING POINT CHART"(PDF).International Tennis Federation.
  35. ^"REGULATIONS FOR WHEELCHAIR TENNIS 2024"(PDF).www.itftennis.com. International Tennis Federation.
  36. ^"French Open prize money 2025: How much do players earn round by round?".independent.co.uk. 29 May 2025.Archived from the original on 31 May 2025. Retrieved2 June 2025.

External links

[edit]
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