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Hewett and Reid win seventh straight French Open

Hewett and Reid win seventh straight French Open
Gordon Reid (left) and Alfie Hewett have won 24 Grand Slam titles together
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In the singles, Hewett - the second seed - reached his second successive Roland Garros final after defeating Argentine fourth seed Gustavo Fernandez 7-5 6-4.
The 28-year-old won his maiden Grand Slam singles title at the French Open in 2017 and he triumphed again in Paris in 2020 and 2021.
Searching for his first major singles title since last year's Australian Open, Hewett will face Tokito Oda, after the top seed won 7-6 (7-4) 6-2 against De la Puente.
Oda is the three-time defending champion at Roland Garros, while he has won the past four Grand Slam singles titles - beating Hewett in two of those finals.
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Britain's Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid have won their seventh successive French Open wheelchair doubles title.
The top seeds claimed a 6-2 6-3 victory over Spain's Martin de la Puente and France's Stephane Houdet to win their 24th Grand Slam title together.
"This was one of the toughest tournaments we faced when we first started playing doubles with each other and it took us a fair few years to get our hands on this trophy," Hewett said during the trophy presentation.
"To win seven in a row is some achievement and I just want to say it's an absolute pleasure to be your doubles partner."
With the crowd cheering against them, in favour of home hope Houdet, Hewett and Reid produced a clinical performance - hitting 29 winners to their opponents' 14 and winning 55% of points on the French-Spanish duo's first serve.
"Big thanks to Alfie, we've been a team for a long time now but we are finding new ways to play and new ways to enjoy it," Reid said.
"It's a big year in wheelchair tennis. It's 50 years of the sport and when we see interviews of the people, the guys who created this sport, everyone says they are amazed by where we are now and how far the sport has come."
Hewett added: "Tennis wins - 50 years of wheelchair tennis, to be on a court like this, having this sort of atmosphere, it's an absolute pleasure and long may it continue."