Jasmine Paolini is the late bloomer who rewrote the ceiling for Italian women's tennis. Born January 4, 1996 in Castelnuovo di Garfagnana, Tuscany, to an Italian father and a mother of Ghanaian-Polish heritage, she came up through the national training center in Tirrenia and spent the better part of a decade grinding the ITF and challenger circuits. She didn't crack the top 100 until age 23, and the real breakthrough didn't arrive until 28 — the rare player whose ceiling kept rising deep into her twenties.
At 5-foot-4, Paolini is built on speed and motor rather than leverage. She plays a fast, aggressive baseline game — quick to the ball, flat and heavy off both wings, and willing to take time away on the forehand instead of waiting for a bigger frame's natural power. The grin and the energy made her a crowd favorite, but the engine underneath is what carried her to the top: relentless court coverage and a refusal to play passive defense against the tour's biggest hitters.
The defining year was 2024. Paolini reached the final at both the French Open and Wimbledon in a single season, climbed to a career-high of No. 4, and paired her singles run with a doubles surge alongside Sara Errani that delivered Olympic gold in Paris. The Roland-Garros run included wins over the era's elite, and at home the Italian Open became her signature stage. She has since traded blows with the likes of Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka, and Coco Gauff at the business end of the biggest events.
Currently ranked No. 14, Paolini enters this stretch off the peak of the 2024–25 window but still a fixture in the second week of majors and a threat any time the clay or the home crowd is involved.