Elsa Jacquemot is the rare French talent who arrived early and then had to earn everything twice. Born in Lyon on 3 May 2003, she turned pro in 2018 and announced herself the way every French junior dreams of — seeded third, she entered and won the girls' singles competition at the 2020 French Open. The wildcards into the Roland-Garros main draw came fast — losses to Elena Rybakina in 2021 and a maiden major win over Heather Watson before Barbora Krejcikova's countrywoman context — but the WTA breakthrough lagged the hype by years, spent grinding ITF and Challenger draws into her early twenties.
The game is right-handed and built on the dirt she grew up on, though the return is the load-bearing wall. The numbers tell the story: she won 56% on second-serve return and 41% on first-serve return across her Challenger climb — a pressure-the-server profile rather than a serve-and-overpower one. She averages around 3.8 aces per match, modest by tour standards, so the holds come from court craft and depth, not free points.
The defining run came in late 2025. Reaching her first WTA 500 semifinal at the Guadalajara Open Akron — beating top seed Elise Mertens and sixth seed Tatjana Maria en route — Jacquemot moved to a career-high world No. 62 and became the French No. 2. That season also delivered her strongest Slam result with the third round at Roland Garros, plus first main-draw wins at Wimbledon and the US Open, the latter built on a win over Marie Bouzkova before Leylah Fernandez ended it.
She pushed higher early in 2026, hitting a career-high singles ranking of No. 53 on 2 February 2026. Now back around No. 80, the current beat is the familiar one for a clay-bred grinder: consolidate the gains, and find a way past the Aryna Sabalenka-tier names that still mark the gap between the top 50 and the top 20.