Qinwen Zheng is the most consequential Chinese player since Li Na, and the trajectory backs the billing. Born in Shiyan in 2002, she turned professional in 2018 at just 16, following a junior career that included semifinal runs at Roland-Garros and the US Open in 2019. She came up through the Chinese pipeline before basing herself in Barcelona, and has worked with coach Pere Riba since early 2021. The early hardware piled up fast: WTA Newcomer of the Year in 2022 and Most Improved Player of the Year in 2023.
The game is the classic power blueprint, executed at scale. She hit by far the most aces on the WTA Tour in 2024, with 445 — almost 100 more than second-placed Elena Rybakina — and it's a fearsome delivery that, if returned, sets up her even-more-fearsome forehand. At the 2024 Australian Open she struck her forehands at roughly 2800 rpm of spin, almost identical to the men's tournament average — higher than any other woman in the draw. The 5-foot-10 frame gives her serve leverage and the baseline reach to absorb pace; the soft spot has been the return and a tendency to go cold against lower-ranked opposition.
The defining year was 2024. She won Olympic gold for China, made her first major final at the Australian Open, nearly won the WTA Finals, and jumped from No. 14 to No. 5. At Paris she beat top seed Iga Swiatek in the semis and held off Donna Vekić in the final to become the first Chinese player to win Olympic singles gold. In Melbourne she fell to Aryna Sabalenka, then ran Coco Gauff close in the Riyadh title match. She peaked at world No. 4 in June 2025, the second Chinese woman into the top five after Li Na.
The current beat is a comeback. Her injury-affected 2025 included semifinals at Rome and a Roland-Garros quarterfinal before elbow surgery in July ended the season early. Now ranked 56, she's rebuilding her schedule and her ranking — the floor for a player whose ceiling is already gold.