Mirra Andreeva has been installed as a -1100 favorite over Jil Teichmann in a French Open match, a price that puts the 19-year-old Russian far out in front before a ball is struck. For bettors looking at the matchup today, the number is blunt: a Teichmann upset would return US$680 on every US$100 wager.
That kind of gap is why Andreeva is drawing the search interest now. She is ranked No. 8 in the WTA table with 4,181 points, stands 1.75m and plays right-handed, and she has won 85% of her last 20 matches. Those numbers help explain why the market is so one-sided, especially in a French Open preview built around betting lines rather than a match report. Andreeva has also been in strong recent clay form, with her path through the season already under scrutiny in coverage such as her Roland Garros fourth-round run after the Bouzkova win, her arrival at Roland Garros 2026 after a strong clay swing, and the Rome result where Coco Gauff ended her run to reach the semi-finals.
The betting board extends well beyond the moneyline. Markets listed around the match include total games, set betting, aces, game handicap, correct score, total sets and double faults, with alternate figures ranging across 15.5, 16.5, 17.5, 18.5, 19.5, 20.5 and 21.5 games, plus handicap and set lines such as -6.5, -2.5, 0.5, 2.5, 3.5 and 6.5. That breadth matters because a lopsided favorite often pushes bettors toward narrower questions than simply who wins.
The matchup also carries a strange edge in the way Teichmann is framed: seasoned, yes, but listed as 56 years old in the preview, a detail that sits awkwardly beside a French Open betting line and underlines how little margin there is for error in a market this distorted. Even so, the only thing that will settle the board is the match itself, and the payout on an upset is already the number to beat.
What happens next is simple enough: Andreeva and Teichmann meet in the French Open, and the price will either hold or crack. If the favorite wins as expected, the market keeps its shape. If it does not, a $100 bet on Teichmann turns into a $680 return and the most talked-about number in the preview becomes the one that missed.

