Skip to Content
Newsletter

The Prickle and Promise of Jelena Ostapenko

[vc_empty_space height="5px"]

By Giri Nathan

[vc_empty_space height="15px"]Root for Jelena Ostapenko, because I really want it to be the case that she either loses in the first round of the French Open or wins it—nothing in between. Back in 2016, as a 19-year-old playing in the main draw for the first time, Ostapenko fell in the first round. She was ousted by a fellow teen named Naomi Osaka.

Then in 2017, ranked No. 47 in the world, Ostapenko returned to Paris and did something strange: whooped like a large bird, hit the tennis ball into eraser dust, and left four seeded players in her wake as she became the first unseeded woman to win there in 84 years. In the final, she recovered from a set and a break deficit versus Simona Halep to win her first professional title, tallying an extremely on-brand 54 winners and 54 unforced errors as she did it. That seemed to be her promise: a prickly young star with no patience for the slow exchange and an unholy appetite for cleaning the dirt off the lines at 76 mph. She drove fast and cursed and generally brought chaos. I was looking forward to many years of this, since tennis has always benefited from such powerful auras. What could be spicier than a rowdy young person with a clay-unfriendly style barging into Roland-Garros and winning the whole thing? Doing it again, maybe.

She has not quite delivered on the promise of that season. The prickliness stuck around, but the results did not. Since winning the 2017 French Open, Ostapenko has not won three consecutive matches on clay. She lost in the first round of the tournament in 2018 and 2019. Somewhere in this time, she was anointed the undisputed queen of the double fault. Having last tasted the top 10 in September 2018, she dropped as low as No. 83 in the world in July 2019, and came into this week ranked No. 43, just four spots higher than she was before her title run. While she has enjoyed rashes of success on hard court and grass in the interim—including a quarterfinal and semifinal appearance at Wimbledon—she still has plenty of unfinished business on the surface where she made her name.

Now, suddenly, Ostapenko has a reasonable opportunity to get that elusive third consecutive clay-court win, against world No. 87 Paula Badosa. In the second round, she had to go through Karolina Pliskova, the tournament’s No. 2 seed and favorite by any measure. (Though while we’re here, let’s note this is the same Pliskova who Ostapenko beat in Beijing last year despite dumping an astonishing 25 double faults in the match.) In a match of power hitters, Ostapenko showed she had other things in her bag. If you had told me in 2017 that three years later Roland-Garros would be celebrating an Ostapenko drop shot, I would not believe you. I also would not have believed that the match was played in October in full compression gear, with the tennis ball moving through the cold wet air like a partially deflated beach ball, but, yeah. The pros are now just like us hackers.[vc_raw_html]JTNDaWZyYW1lJTIwd2lkdGglM0QlMjI1NjAlMjIlMjBoZWlnaHQlM0QlMjIzMTUlMjIlMjBzcmMlM0QlMjJodHRwcyUzQSUyRiUyRnd3dy55b3V0dWJlLmNvbSUyRmVtYmVkJTJGQmFZaVA3LW9YV2slMjIlMjBmcmFtZWJvcmRlciUzRCUyMjAlMjIlMjBhbGxvdyUzRCUyMmFjY2VsZXJvbWV0ZXIlM0IlMjBhdXRvcGxheSUzQiUyMGNsaXBib2FyZC13cml0ZSUzQiUyMGVuY3J5cHRlZC1tZWRpYSUzQiUyMGd5cm9zY29wZSUzQiUyMHBpY3R1cmUtaW4tcGljdHVyZSUyMiUyMGFsbG93ZnVsbHNjcmVlbiUzRSUzQyUyRmlmcmFtZSUzRQ==[/vc_raw_html][vc_empty_space height="15px"]After the match, Ostapenko explained that she benefits from her opponent’s expectation that she will hit big at all costs, and is playing different tennis under these unusual conditions. “I was much younger and also I was fearless,” she said. “Nobody knew me, but now it’s a little bit different.” It is a little bit different, but I hope that old traditions live on, and hope that you sustain your commitment to either flaming out of, or outright winning, the French Open.[vc_empty_space height="25px"]Above: Jelena Ostapenko frowns during her second-round win over Karolina Pliskova. (Getty Images)[vc_column width="1/6"][vc_tweetmeme share_via="racqetmagazine"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_facebook type="button_count"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_empty_space height="45px"][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_column width="1/2"]

Buy Now
Racquet: The Book

racquet_book

[vc_btn title="BUY NOW" style="outline" shape="square" color="success" size="lg" align="center" button_block="true" link="url:https%3A%2F%2Fracquetmag.com%2Fproduct%2Fracquet-the-book%2F|title:BUY%20NOW||"]The best writing from the first three years of Racquet magazine.[vc_column width="1/4"]

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Racquet

Postcard from Egypt: I Turned a Vacation into an ITF

One 37-year old former D3 player trying to stay fit while traveling with her husband and toddler gets carried away and enters a pro tournament at the encouragement of her hotel pro. What could go wrong?

May 1, 2026

Michael McGregor’s Tennis Love Story

The vibrant and idiosyncratic still lifes—often composed on hotel stationary—are the work of artist Michael McGregor, whose roots in a “huge tennis family” inform one of his favorite themes.

April 28, 2026

Pàdel Shots: a Lexicon

A by-no-means-exhaustive list of the names and neologisms that define a new(ish) sport

April 27, 2026

Why Everyone You Know is Playing Padel

Many sports like to claim that they’re the fastest-growing, and they often have a legitimate claim to the title, depending on how you measure it. But, by almost any yardstick, pàdel really is the world’s fastest-growing sport.

April 27, 2026

Have Pàdel Will Travel

The hottest clubs around the world don’t feature EDM dance floors or after-hours speakeasies. They’re racquet-centric, they’re wellness-affiliated, and they’re taking advantage of the fastest-growing sport on the planet. Welcome to the global network of pàdel.

April 27, 2026

Pàdel Party in the U.S.A.

Pàdel is about people. Whether you play competitively and want to win, or play socially and need a reason to wear that outfit, it revolves around coming together as a team to make all the different reasons come to life.

April 27, 2026
See all posts