Some stories only tennis can write. Zhang Shuai's run in Strasbourg is one of them. At 37 years old, the Chinese veteran has strung together two victories to reach the quarterfinals, sweeping past France's Diane Parry 6-2, 7-5 on Wednesday.
Zhang's path through this tournament tells its own story of tenacity. In the opening round, she overturned a set deficit against Cristina Bucsa, saving match points to win 2-6, 7-6(7), 7-5 in a dramatic three-setter. Against Parry, she seized control from the start. A dominant 6-2 first set was followed by a tighter second where the Frenchwoman pushed back before falling 7-5.
Zhang is navigating a unique chapter of her career. A former top-20 player in 2019, she endured a well-documented losing streak that sparked widespread debate on tour about her future. Her resilience became a story in itself, drawing both public support and difficult questions about how long she could continue. Strasbourg is providing an answer on the court: she can still compete.
On clay, Zhang rediscovers the qualities that built her reputation: a precise two-handed backhand, tactical intelligence honed over two decades on tour, and a knack for shifting rhythms that unsettles younger opponents. In the quarterfinals, she will face Czech eighth seed , who benefited from Oliynykova's retirement while trailing 1-3.
Whatever comes next, Zhang Shuai is a reminder that experience and determination still carve their own path in tennis. With Roland-Garros just around the corner, her current form is intriguing.
