Paralympic champions Sam Schröder, right, and Niels Vink, left, won the quad doubles and reached the quad singles final at the French Open ©Getty Images

Paralympic champions Sam Schröder and Niels Vink won the first wheelchair tennis final of the French Open, triumphing in straight sets in the quad doubles.

The Dutch pair have been in scintillating form in Paris, and are set to contest the quad singles final after also winning their semi-finals.

Vink saw off Australia's Heath Davidson 6-3, 6-1, while Australian Open champion Schröder beat David Wagner of the United States 6-3, 6-4.

The doubles top seeds won last year's US Open playing together, and were runners-up to Briton Andy Lapthorne and American Andy Lapthorne at the 2022 Australian Open.

They overcame Davidson and Brazil's Ymanitu Silva 6-2, 6-2 in one hour and five minutes to clinch victory.

Davidson was a silver medallist in the quad doubles at Tokyo 2020, playing with legendary compatriot Dylan Alcott who retired after the Australian Open.

Earlier in the day on Court Philippe-Chatrier, men's doubles Paralympic champions Stéphane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer went down to Argentina's Gustavo Fernández and Japan's Shingo Kunieda in the semi-finals.

The second seeds lost 7-6, 6-1 to 2019 French Open winners Fernández and Kunieda, who booked their place in the final against Britain's Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid.

Top seeds Hewett and Reid, silver medallists at the last two Paralympics, are the reigning champions of all four Grand Slams in doubles, but had to win a third-set tiebreak 10-8 to beat Spain's Daniel Caverzaschi and Martín de la Puente 6-2, 3-6, 1-0.

Women's doubles Paralympic champions Diede de Groot and Aniek van Koot of The Netherlands continued their bid for a fifth consecutive French Open title by beating Momoko Ohtani of Japan and China's Zhu Zhenzhen 6-2, 7-6.

Second seeds Yui Kamiji of Japan and Kgothatso Montjane of South Africa eased into the final with a 6-2, 6-1 victory over Chile's Macarena Cabrillana and France's Emmanuelle Mörch.

The top two seeds in the women's singles also booked their places in the final.

De Groot, the holder of all four Grand Slams and Paralympic champion, cruised past Montjane without dropping a game, while four-time French Open winner Kamiji overcame The Netherlands' Van Koot 6-2, 6-3.