French Open notebook: Vekic's comeback, Ostapenko's injury and more from Round 1

PARIS -- Round 1 at Roland Garros is in the books. Five seeds have bowed out, with the bottom half of the draw taking the brunt of the damage and losing four: defending champion Barbora Krejcikova
Donna Vekic on the mend
It's a good thing Donna Vekic
Now ranked No.100, Vekic had to qualify for Roland Garros, which she did with three good wins against Robin Anderson, Louisa Chirico
"The thing is, when you're injured for a while and you start coming back and things don't go the way you want them to go, you start questioning yourself a lot," Vekic said. "Am I ever going to get back to that level again? When you start getting those wins, you think 'Oh, maybe I will.'
"Going through qualifying here, I would say it's one of my greatest career achievements. Passing through qualies is probably the hardest thing ever. Way back, I lost two times in the last round of qualies. So I never qualified. I know how difficult it is."
Vekic underwent knee surgery at the start of the 2021 season, but as she came back to the tour she found the injury had led to some collateral damage.
"After Courmayeur [in October] last year, I had a tear in my plantar fascia because I've been playing the whole year with pain in my knee because of the surgery. I had pain in my left foot because of overcompensating. Then when that healed and I started practicing again, I hurt my right knee again.
"After Australia, I said I can't deal with the pain anymore. So I had to start from zero. I did a couple of treatments for my knee again and really rehab from the beginning and take three months off. That was really depressing."
Vekic returned to competition in March in Marbella, where she lost 6-0, 6-1 to Ana Bogdan
For now, Vekic sees the remainder of the 2022 season as a building block for next year.
"I just want to play as many matches as I can this season and build for the next one, to try to get back to my level again and to stay pain-free. I'm definitely far from being fit."
It's an uphill climb for Vekic, but after a handful of solid wins under her belt, she's trying to keep things positive.
"If you asked me two weeks ago I would have told you I was going to quit tennis. It's amazing what a couple of wins can do for a tennis player."
The French are flying
Led by Alizé Cornet, five Frenchwomen have advanced to the second round for the first time since 2017. The biggest headlines belonged to 19-year-old Diane Parry
Jeanjean has enjoyed a circuitous route to becoming the lowest-ranked player in the second round. Ranked No.227, the 26-year-old received a wildcard into the main draw on her home Slam. Her first-round match against Nuria Parrizas Diaz
Parry est MAGIQUE ✨
— wta (@WTA) May 23, 2022
🇫🇷 @dparry02 comes from a set down to stun defending champion Krejcikova 1-6, 6-2, 6-3 at #RolandGarros! pic.twitter.com/VF5gufXOIV
Jelena Ostapenko overcoming injury woes
Jelena Ostapenko
"Rome and Madrid was tough after injury, first tournaments, you feel like you still have pain but you don't really have pain. It's more mental. So it needs some time to get rid of those thoughts, because I felt like in the practice I was playing really well. I was playing many points against good girls, and I was winning most of them.
"So I felt like I have to bring this tennis to the tournament."
Paula in Paris 🙌
— wta (@WTA) May 24, 2022
2021 quarterfinalist 🇪🇸 @paulabadosa sails through with a 6-2, 6-0 victory over Ferro.
🎥: @rolandgarrospic.twitter.com/KF6KN4ynQX
Stats of the Round
4: Top 10 seeds to bow out in the opening round: No.2 Barbora Krejcikova
54: Minutes it took for Iga Swiatek
2: Points lost by Paula Badosa
48: Winners struck by Linda Noskova
10: Aces hit by Ons Jabeur
3: Consecutive Slams in which Lesia Tsurenko successfully qualified and drew the World No.1 in the first round.
15: Top 10 wins recorded by Kaia Kanepi in her career, with her 15th coming against Muguruza in Paris. Ten of those wins have come at the Slams.
7: Players who went unbroken through Round 1: Tamara Zidansek
2: Players who led the field in return games won through Round 1: Iga Swiatek
3: Number of times 10 or more American women advanced to the second round at Roland Garros in the past 10 years. This year, 10 have advanced.
Best Quote
Q: Do you have the impression that you have looped the loop today? When you say I went to study and I was sure to come back, were you really sure to come back?
Leolia Jeanjean
So the loop is not looped yet, because the loop will be looped when I will have played the four Grand Slams and when I will have reached the objectives I have had ever since I was young."