Kazakhstan tennis star Elena Rybakina’s potential French Open kit with Yonex was leaked on social media. The 2026 Australian Open champion is a premier, Yonex-sponsored athlete.
Ahead of the French Open later this month, a fan of Rybakina revealed Yonex kit for Roland Garros. It’s a long-sleeve cropped top with a dark black base in a geometric pattern of orange. The outfit also includes a white skirt with a single bold orange stripe running horizontally across the lower section.
Fans shared mixed reactions on the kit in reference with Rybakina.
“she’s never wearing this but it really shows that yonex is completely lost when it comes to kits design,” one fan wrote.
“this is actually really good but elena is allergic to showing her abs,” one fan commented.
“Rybakina doesn’t like show her belly. Especially on court. I don’t she ll wear it on Roland Garros,” one fan added.
“Elena doesn’t usually wear kits that expose her midriff. I say someone like Noskova does, as it seems she’s the one wearing most of the two-piece Yonex stuff,” one fan reacted.
“Can I talk with the designers,this ain’t it. It looks like a Commercial jazz class kit,” one fan added.
“Omg I love it!!! Show those abs but still cutesy an classy like she is,” one fan reacted.
Elena Rybakina Not Satisfied With Electronic Line Calling At Madrid Open
Elena Rybakina suffered a shocking defeat against Zheng Qinwen in the fourth round of the Madrid Open on Sunday.
Rybakina was not impressed by several decisions by officials in the game. One particular decision came in the second set when the Kazakh was down 4-3 in the second set. Qinwen was given an ace on a serve, which Rybakina felt was out.
She asked the chair umpire and see the spot on the clay court for herself. However, the umpire rejected her proposal, saying she had to prioritize the electronic line-calling system. This left the World No. 2 unsatisfied with the line-calling system in place at the Madrid Open.
“The system is wrong, this is not a joke,” Rybakina told the official. “Well with this thing, I won’t trust it at all, because there was no mark even close to what the TV showed.”
This happened last year as well when Alexander Zverev felt that electronic line-calling at Madrid was not accurate and he was even warned against taking a picture of a contested ball mark. Zverev claimed there was a “malfunction in the system” after a ball was called in.
“It was, I think, similar to what Zverev had last year because it was in front of her nose. You can’t not see it. It was pretty frustrating,” Rybakina added. “It’s kind of a stolen point. I understand it was her serve and she was serving really well, but it’s really frustrating.”
Rybakina is currently preparing for the Italian Open before the Roland Garros turn up.
Read More News:
Martina Navratilova Gives Nod To Emma Raducanu’s New Coach Hire Before Rome Return
College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in tennis, college football, men’s college basketball, women’s college basketball, and college baseball!
