sport news The French Open loses local hero Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in dramatic four set loss ... trends now Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga says goodbye to the French Open after a dramatic and emotional four-set defeat by Casper Ruud at Roland Garros - despite delivering a heroic performance in his final appearance Jo-Wilfried Tonga said goodbye to the French Open after an emotional defeat The Frenchman's right arm appeared to seize up as he lost to Casper Ruud The home crowd sang the Marseillaise to honour their 37-year-old countryman Elsewhere, Russia's Abdrey Rublev came close to disqualification in his match He hit a loose ball in anger which flew perilously close to a ground man's face By Matthew Lambert for the Daily Mail Published: 19:33 BST, 24 May 2022 | Updated: 19:35 BST, 24 May 2022 Viewcomments Roland Garros bid goodbye to one of its favourite sons on Tuesday as Jo-Wilfried Tsonga bowed out in a dramatic and emotional match on Philippe Chatrier. Facing 8th seeded Norwegian Casper Ruud, the Frenchman summoned the kind of form we have not seen from him for a long time in a terrific four-set match, before his right arm seemed to seize up towards the end. One group of fans came armed with a drum, a trumpet and a huge painting of Tsonga’s face. During a changeover in the final set the entire crowd spontaneously sang the Marseillaise. Jo-Wilfried Tonga's right arm appeared to seize up as he lost in four sets to Casper Ruud Tsonga bowed out in a dramatic and emotional match against the eighth seeded Norwegian Watch every match from Roland-Garros live and exclusive on discovery+ and Eurosport There was an extended farewell on court afterwards when Tsonga was joined by his family and everyone in the stadium cried. It was all very lovely and all very French. Argentina’s Facundo Bagnis could be getting a phone call from the referee’s office after he lost 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 to Daniil Medvedev with thick strapping around his right leg. Players can be fined if they are judged to have taken to the court despite being injured just to collect their prize money. And given that he retired from his previous match in Geneva and was visibly limping on Tuesday, Bagnis could be in trouble. One group of fans came armed with a drum, a trumpet and a huge painting of Tsonga’s face There was an extended farewell on court afterwards when Tsonga was joined by his family Tonga' received an emotional farewell from the French crowd at the end of the match Russia’s Andrey Rublev was lucky to avoid disqualification after a ball he whacked in anger rebounded and nearly hit a groundsman in the face. Instead it merely knocked off his cap and gave him an almighty shock. Given how fast the ball was travelling we were an inch or two away from a very nasty incident indeed. ‘I lost my mind for a moment,’ he said. ‘It's unacceptable.’ Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility