France hit the ground running
Sometimes a start needs no debate. Clean. Crisp. Almost surgical. For France, this opening step in the 2026 Billie Jean King Cup looked routine on paper — but only if they treated it properly. They did. The Bleues brushed aside Norway with the authority of a team that doesn’t just want to show up, but to build momentum and make sure this season turns into something worth watching again.
Against opponents miles below them in the rankings, the job wasn’t to chase flashy numbers. It was to set the tone. And the two rookies got that message loud and clear.
Pour sa première sélection sous les couleurs de l’équipe de France, Léolia Jeanjean a apporté un premier point précieux aux Françaises. Le résumé de la rencontre ↘️https://t.co/JuM6C8PvcZ
— FFT (@FFTennis) April 8, 2026
Jeanjean, express delivery
There was a real edge to Léolia Jeanjean’s racket. First call-up. Rain stopped her on Tuesday just as she was coasting. Back on court Wednesday morning to finish the job. Not exactly the sort of script that rattles the Montpellier player. She had left her match with Astrid Wanja Brune Olsen halfway through, 6-1, 3-0 up. She came back, wrapped it up in 20 minutes, then packed her kit away as if it were just another day at the office. Final score 6-1, 6-1. Clean. Sharp. No fuss.
The message was plain enough. Yes, the opposition was weak. But you don’t sneer at a debut win when you’ve kept your nerve and done it properly. Not when the weather’s forced the whole thing into a stop-start mess that felt like a badly edited box set.
Jacquemot sticks to the script
The second act was a bit livelier, though not exactly a barnburner. Elsa Jacquemot, also handed her first France call-up, did what players do when they keep climbing the rankings. She started slowly, got broken twice, then stepped on the gas and shut down Malene Helgo’s resistance.
A 6-1, 6-3 win, built on calm, smart, almost casual control. The kind of display that shows how quickly a match can swing once the head catches up with the legs. You could see Jacquemot growing into it game by game, as the weight of a first cap faded point by point.
A team settling in
By winning both singles, France gave themselves the luxury of heading into the doubles with no pressure hanging over them. Kristina Mladenovic and Sarah Rakotomanga were sent out to finish the day, but the hard work had already been done. And beyond the numbers, there’s real promise here. A reshaped side. Younger. Driven by the energy of a group that, even without some of its old heads, looks ready to start a new chapter.
There’s also the steady hand of Alizé Cornet, an involved captain who feels a bit like the team’s older sister. Watching her on the bench, alert and close to it, tells you everything about this squad: together, focused, no nonsense.
And now for the real test
France won’t hang about. Their second pool match comes later the same day, against the winner of Romania and Latvia, before another one on Thursday. The task is simple: finish top and keep the dream of moving up alive.
This first win doesn’t tell us everything about the true level of Les Bleues, but it does set a mood. A fresh confidence. Some contagious energy. And one clear thought: if this group keeps playing with this much discipline and appetite, it can very quickly become a nasty surprise for anyone foolish enough to take them lightly.
For an opening night, that’ll do nicely. A solid base. A promise they’ll now have to keep. And if the 2026 campaign needed an early message, the Bleues have already written it in bold: they’re here to move forward. Not to watch other teams get on with it.

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