
Lois Boisson has completely changed the arch of her tennis career in a matter of weeks.
The French tennis player overcame a significant injury to reach the 2025 French Open and has now taken advantage of every bit of the spotlight.
Playing in her first career major, Boisson has made plenty of history after making a run to the semifinals of the women’s singles tournament at Roland-Garros, due next for a matchup against second-seeded American star Coco Gauff.
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Here’s everything to know about Boisson’s background, from her tennis career so far to her 2024 injury.
MORE: Breaking down the prize money for the 2025 French Open
Who is Lois Boisson?
Lois Boisson is a French tennis player who first made her WTA Tour debut in 2021 when she received a wildcard into the doubles main draw at theĀ WTA Lyon Open.
In singles, the right-handed Boisson has a career record of 132-79, plus a 2-11 record in doubles. She’s the owner of six ITF singles titles and one WTA 125 title, which came at Saint-Malo in 2024. That title led to Boisson earning the No. 152 ranking by the WTA in May 2024.
Boisson was set to receive a wildcard and make her major main draw debut at the 2024 French Open, but a week before the tournament, she tore her ACL at the Trophée Clarins.
However, Boisson’s stardom has instead exploded at the 2025 French Open, her Grand Slam debut. As a wild card, she recorded her first major wins and reached the semifinals, including victories over world No. 3 Jessica Pegula and world No. 6Ā Mirra Andreeva. With her success, Boisson became the third player since 1980 to make the semifinals in her first major, joiningĀ Monica Seles and Jennifer Capriati.
At the 2025 French Open, Boisson also became the lowest-ranked (No. 361) quarterfinalist and semifinalist at the tournament in 40 years.
LOIS BOISSON: LOWEST-RANKED GRAND SLAM SEMIFINALIST IN THE LAST 40 YEARS š¤Æš«š· pic.twitter.com/FwTrfUh2mw
ā Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) June 4, 2025
Where is Lois Boisson from?
Boisson was born inĀ Dijon, France. When she reached the French Open semifinals, Boisson also became the French No. 1 player.
MORE:Ā French Open results, bracket, seeds for men’s and women’s tennis singles at Roland-Garros
How old is Lois Boisson?
Boisson, born on May 16, 2003, is 22.
Lois Boisson career earnings
Boisson’s success at the 2025 French Open will be life-changing in more ways than one. Financially, her tennis career will grow exponentially.
Prior toĀ Roland Garros, Boisson had a career earnings total of around $148,000. Just by making the semifinals at the French Open, she has netted at least $785,000, per Front Office Sports, over quadrupling her career earnings in the major alone.
Lois Boissonās earnings for her entire career before Roland Garros:
$148,500.
After reaching the Roland Garros semifinals, she will leave with at least:
$788,200.
She has quadrupled her career earnings in less than two weeks.
Life-changing. š„¹š°
š«š·ā¤ļø pic.twitter.com/3JiqgrogAj
ā The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 4, 2025
Lois Boisson injury history
Even outside of the fact that Boisson was playing in her first-ever major at the French Open, her run is remarkable for another reason: her injury recovery. In May 2024, Boisson tore her ACL, putting her tennis career at a complete halt.
Because of that torn ACL just a week before her potential first Grand Slam tournament began, it prevented her from competing. At the time, she was ranked a career high of No. 152. Now, she’s become the biggest story at the French Open after her injury recovery and will be skyrocketing up the world rankings.
Before the 2025 French Open, Boisson started to get back into her rhythm at the ITF-level, winning a tournament. But even still, with the level of competition she’s faced atĀ Roland-Garros, she’s had a shocking run and unique story.
“It’s incredible, no matter what, given what happened last year and all the difficult moments I went through,” Boisson said after advancing to the 2025 French Open semifinals, per ESPN.
A year ago, Lois Boisson tore her ACL in her left knee.
Fast forward to today, she just became the first women’s wild card to reach the semifinals at the French Open since the Open Era began in 1968.
Talk about a comeback story ā¤ļø pic.twitter.com/QqfuMYR1FR
ā SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) June 4, 2025
Lois Boisson deodorant
Boisson has been in a big spotlight before, but for a very different reason. In April, at a WTA 250-level tournament in Rouen, France, Boisson’s opponent asked the umpire if she could tell Boisson to wear deodorant.
“She smells really bad,” Britainās Harriet DartĀ said in a clip that went around social media.Ā
Harriet Dart asked the umpire to tell her opponent to wear deodorant š³
She lost the match 6-0 6-3
(h/t @popalorena)
pic.twitter.com/kk5Wm69jTdā The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 15, 2025
Boisson then posted on social media poking fun at the clip, using a photo of deodorant photoshopped into her hand.Ā
Lois Boissonās response to Harriet Dart saying she needs to wear deodorant during their match ššššš
āDove, apparently we need a collaborationā https://t.co/S4u0dgevPS pic.twitter.com/0E5ckZhULn
ā The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 15, 2025
Dart later apologized for her comment about Boisson wearing deodorant, posting on Instagram: “I want to apologise for what I said on court today, it was a heat-of-the-moment comment that I truly regret. That’s not how I want to carry myself and I take full responsibility. I have a lot of respect for Lois and how she competed today. I’ll learn from this and move forward.”
