Guto Miguel has become the first Brazilian-born player to win the Roland Garros boys’ singles title after beating Michael Antonius in straight sets in Paris.
The 17-year-old Brazilian defeated the American 6-3, 6-4 on Saturday to complete a landmark run at the French Grand Slam.
The result gives Brazil its first boys’ singles champion at Roland Garros and adds another significant junior title to the country’s recent tennis record.
Guto Miguel beats Michael Antonius to win Roland Garros junior title

Miguel, the No. 1 seed in the boys’ singles draw, beat Michael Antonius 6-3, 6-4 in the final on Court Simonne-Mathieu.
Roland Garros listed the match time at 1h15, with Miguel winning both sets against the No. 13 seed.
The scoreline was notable because Antonius had reached the final without dropping a set. The American had won five straight-set matches before facing Miguel, including victories over Koki Watanabe, Yannick Theodor Alexandrescou, Ziga Sesko and Keaton Hance.
Miguel had also come through a difficult path. He beat Hiroki Kawanishi, Redding Cozad, Niels McDonald Baena, Timofey Behrmann and Luis Felipe Storck Franca before the final.
ESPN reported that the title will also take Miguel to first place in the next ITF junior ranking update. Roland Garros listed him as fourth in the junior rankings during the tournament.
Brazil finally has a Roland Garros boys’ singles champion
The title is a first for a Brazilian-born player in the Roland Garros boys’ singles event.
Brazil had previously come close in Paris. Edison Mandarino, Thomaz Koch and Luis Felipe Tavares all reached boys’ singles finals at Roland Garros, but none won the title.
The country had already produced junior doubles champions at the tournament. Gustavo Kuerten won the boys’ doubles title in 1994, while Matheus Pucinelli won the same event in 2019.
Miguel’s singles title now gives Brazil a new place in the event’s junior history. It also follows Joao Fonseca’s US Open boys’ singles title in 2023, another recent Grand Slam junior success for Brazilian tennis.
The comparison should remain measured. Fonseca’s senior rise is his own story, and Miguel still has to build his professional career step by step.
But this result stands on its own. Miguel arrived in Paris as the top seed, beat an opponent who had not lost a set in the tournament, and became Brazil’s first boys’ singles champion at Roland Garros.
That is already a major achievement for Brazilian tennis.
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