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2004 French Open – Men's singles

Gastón Gaudio defeated Guillermo Coria in the final, 0–6, 3–6, 6–4, 6–1, 8–6 to win the men's singles tennis title at the 2004 French Open.[1][2] It was his first and only major title, and Gaudio became the first Argentine to win a major since Guillermo Vilas at the 1979 Australian Open. Gaudio came back from two sets down, saved two championship points, and twice broke Coria's serve when the latter was serving for the championship.

Juan Carlos Ferrero was the defending champion, but was defeated in the second round by Igor Andreev, in what was his first loss at the French Open prior to the semifinals.

This was the first major where Roger Federer competed as the world No. 1. He lost in the third round to former No. 1 and three-time champion Gustavo Kuerten, in his last pre-quarterfinal exit from a major until the 2013 Wimbledon Championships, a run of 36 quarterfinals or better in a row. Until 2023, this was the last French Open not to feature future 14-time champion Rafael Nadal, who withdrew prior to the tournament due to an ankle injury sustained in Estoril in mid-April.[3]

This was the first major in the Open Era to feature four Argentines in the quarterfinals, those being Gaudio, Coria, David Nalbandian, and Juan Ignacio Chela.

Wayne Ferreira matched Stefan Edberg's all-time record on his 54th consecutive major main draw appearance.

The first round match between Fabrice Santoro and Arnaud Clément was the then-longest match of the Open Era, lasting 6 hours and 33 minutes and played over two days. John Isner and Nicolas Mahut would later break this record with their first-round singles match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships.

This was the last time that none of the Big Three reached the round of 16 at a Grand Slam until the 2024 US Open. Furthermore, this is the most recent men's Grand Slam to be won by an unseeded player.

Seeds

01.   Switzerland Roger Federer (third round)
02.   United States Andy Roddick (second round)
03.   Argentina Guillermo Coria (final)
04.   Spain Juan Carlos Ferrero (second round)
05.   Spain Carlos Moyá (quarterfinals)
06.   United States Andre Agassi (first round)
07.   Germany Rainer Schüttler (first round)
08.   Argentina David Nalbandian (semifinals)
09.   United Kingdom Tim Henman (semifinals)
10.   France Sébastien Grosjean (second round)
11.   Chile Nicolás Massú (third round)
12.   Australia Lleyton Hewitt (quarterfinals)
13.   Thailand Paradorn Srichaphan (second round)
14.   Czech Republic Jiří Novák (second round)
15.   Netherlands Sjeng Schalken (withdrew because of a viral infection)
16.   Chile Fernando González (first round)
17.   Spain Tommy Robredo (fourth round)
18.   Australia Mark Philippoussis (first round)
19.   Netherlands Martin Verkerk (third round)
20.   Russia Marat Safin (fourth round)
21.   Romania Andrei Pavel (second round)
22.   Argentina Juan Ignacio Chela (quarterfinals)
23.   Spain Feliciano López (fourth round)
24.   Sweden Jonas Björkman (second round)
25.   Croatia Ivan Ljubičić (second round)
26.   Spain Albert Costa (third round)
27.   United States Vince Spadea (second round)
28.   Brazil Gustavo Kuerten (quarterfinals)
29.   Belarus Max Mirnyi (first round)
30.   Argentina Mariano Zabaleta (second round)
31.   Slovakia Dominik Hrbatý (second round)
32.   France Arnaud Clément (first round)

Click on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.

Qualifying

Draw

Key

Finals

Top half

Section 1

Section 2

Section 3

Section 4

Bottom half

Section 5

Section 6

Section 7

Section 8

References

  1. ^ "Deux: Death on the Dirt".
  2. ^ Robson, Douglas (2004-06-07). "USATODAY.com - Gaudio rallies past Coria to take home French Open title". Usatoday30.usatoday.com. Retrieved 2022-08-01.
  3. ^ PICHENÉ, JULIEN (9 March 2018). "MAY 23, 2005: "RAFA" BEGINS AT ROLAND-GARROS". Roland Garros. Retrieved 10 August 2020.

External links