Cristina Bucșa won her first WTA 500 singles title by defeating Magdalena Fręch 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 in the Merida Open 2026 final. During the trophy ceremony, Fręch corrected the presenter who interrupted her runner-up speech. Bucșa's victory marks her as the 19th Spanish player to claim a WTA title.
The Merida Open 2026 final took place on March 2, 2026, in Mérida, Mexico, where Cristina Bucșa overcame Magdalena Fręch in a match lasting two hours and 15 minutes. Bucșa, an eight-time WTA doubles champion, secured her first singles title at the WTA 500 level and her first singles trophy since winning the WTA 125 event in Limoges in 2023. Her path to the title included straight-sets victories over Donna Vekić in the opening round, Marina Stakusic, defending champion Zeynep Sönmez, and a semifinal win against Jasmine Paolini, marking her first Top 10 victory.
Fręch, who started the week outside the top 50, reached her third career final by defeating Maria Timofeeva, Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, Marie Bouzková, and Zhang Shuai. She now holds a 1-2 record in WTA finals. During the post-match ceremony, after congratulating Bucșa and beginning to thank her coach Andrzej Kobierski, the presenter assumed Fręch had finished and started closing the event. Fręch interjected, saying, “I’m not finished.” The presenter acknowledged, “Ahh… she’s not finished,” prompting laughter from the crowd. Fręch then smiled and continued, adding, “It’s just the beginning. Sorry. It’s just the entrance,” before thanking her coach for an amazing week in Mexico.
Bucșa praised her opponent during the presentation: “Magdalena, congratulations for this incredible week. We gave all our best, and here we demonstrated how tough we are. So you are also a great champion. I wish you a very fast recovery for Indian Wells and hope to see you in many more finals.” The win is expected to elevate Bucșa to a career-high ranking of No. 31, while Fręch will also climb in the rankings. Bucșa's achievement adds her to the list of 19 Spanish WTA title winners, joining figures like Conchita Martínez (33 titles) and Arantxa Sánchez Vicario (29 titles). Similar interruptions have occurred in past ceremonies, such as at the 2025 US Open and Australian Open finals.