PARIS — After two years without a women’s match in a French Open night session, despite lobbying from broadcasters and some players, WTA Chair Valerie Camillo became the latest stakeholder to directly advocate for scheduling women’s matches in primetime at Roland Garros.Camillo, who was hired in late October to head the women’s tour, had a meeting with French Open organizers, including tournament director Amélie Mauresmo, in the days before the main draw began.In a statement sent to The Athletic, the WTA said Camillo requested the meeting during her regular travel to the tournament “to discuss the extraordinary level of competition and excitement across the women’s game this season.”“The two (Camillo and Mauresmo) met and held an open and productive conversation. During the meeting, Valerie raised the scheduling of women’s matches in the tournament’s night sessions. Over the past five years, four of the 50 night-session matches at Roland-Garros have featured women, including none in 2024 or 2025.”The French Tennis Federation (FFT) did not respond to a request for comment about the meeting.The scheduling of women’s matches has long been an issue at Roland Garros, which since the introduction of a night session in 2021 has scheduled just four of them in that slot, effectively shutting women out of primetime of what the tournament bills as “one great match” per day.