ARTICLE AD BOX
![]()
Jannik Sinner's GF Laila and Tommy Paul's fiancée, Paige Lorenze (Instagram)
The early rounds of the 2026 French Open have brought the usual focus on matchups, form, and upsets, but away from the clay courts, another conversation continues to grow around the tournament.
The fashion presence around Roland Garros has become impossible to ignore, especially with partners of top players drawing large audiences of their own online.
On Wednesday, that attention shifted toward Tommy Paul’s fiancée Paige Lorenze after her courtside outfit caught the eye of fellow tennis influencer and model Laila Hasanovic, who is dating world No. 1 Jannik Sinner.
Why did Paige Lorenze’s French Open outfit catch Laila Hasanovic’s attention?
Lorenze arrived at Roland Garros ahead of Tommy Paul’s second-round match wearing a clean, understated look that quickly spread across tennis social media circles.
Her Instagram post featured a white button-down paired with vintage white adidas shorts, styled with the relaxed confidence that has helped her build a strong following beyond tennis audiences.She captioned the post, “tennis spectator resumed 🙂↔️”.
The outfit itself was simple, but that may have been the point. While tennis fashion often leans into loud branding or luxury-heavy styling during Grand Slam events, Lorenze’s look felt closer to classic tennis culture.
It matched the mood of Roland Garros without trying too hard to dominate the conversation.That post soon picked up attention from Hasanovic, who liked the photos on Instagram. The interaction was subtle, but in a space where fans often try to manufacture rivalries between high-profile tennis partners, it stood out for a different reason.Hasanovic has built her own presence in fashion and social media while regularly appearing at Sinner’s tournaments.
Lorenze operates in a similar lane, balancing influencer work with visibility that naturally comes from being attached to one of the sport’s recognizable names. Comparisons between tennis WAGs happen constantly online, often driven more by fan culture than reality.Wednesday’s exchange suggested something far less dramatic. There was no attempt to compete for attention or create headlines through indirect comments.
Instead, it looked like one public figure appreciating another’s style during one of tennis’ biggest events.The timing also added an interesting layer. Sinner and Paul sit on opposite sides of the Roland Garros draw, meaning they could only meet in the final. Still, the social media interaction felt less connected to tournament dynamics and more reflective of how the newer generation around tennis operates publicly. Visibility matters, branding matters, but open support between personalities in the same space is becoming more common too.For now, the biggest battles at Roland Garros remain on the court. But moments like this continue to show how tennis culture extends far beyond match results.

English (US) ·