The clay of Roland Garros trembled. Did you feel it? Because in Paris, a storm from the Balkans just broke. Anastasija Cvetković, the young prodigy hailing from Niš, didn't just win; she declared war on the junior tennis world and won the opening battle. With a scoreline of 7-5, 6-0 against 11th-seeded Spanish talent Paola Pinera Selorio, Cvetković is now standing tall in the quarterfinals.

A Masterclass in Dominance

Ninety minutes. That is all it took for Cvetković to dismantle a seeded opponent who many thought would be the hurdle. This wasn't a lucky bounce; this was precision, power, and pure will. The first set was a tense affair, a 7-5 grind that showed Cvetković’s mental fortitude under the Parisian sun. But the second set? That was a statement. A 6-0 bagel served to the 11th seed. Can you hear the crowd gasp? That is the sound of a new era beginning for Serbian junior tennis.

From Niš to the World Stage

For years, Serbia has been a factory for tennis greatness, but Cvetković is the fresh spark. Coming from Niš, a city with deep sporting roots, she carries the weight and the pride of her hometown on her racket. This quarterfinal berth isn't just a resume booster; it is a warning shot to the rest of the junior circuit. If she can break the 11th seed in an hour and a half, what stands in her path now? The semi-final awaits, and Cvetković looks ready to feast. The world is watching Niš. The world is watching Anastasija.