Defending champion and top seed Serena Williams goes into the French Open having blasted her way to the Italian title last week, confounding those who said that at 32 she was beginning to show distinct signs of wear and tear.
The American lost just the one set in Rome and her 6-3 6-0 demolition of former French Open finalist Sara Errani in the final served notice that she is back to her steamroller best.
Williams enjoyed an outstanding 2013 when she posted career highs in match wins (78) and titles (11), including her 16th and 17th major championships at Roland Garros and the US Open.
But this year has been much more of a struggle with a fourth-round exit to Ana Ivanovic in the Australian Open followed by a stunning opening-round defeat to 78th-ranked Jana Cepelova in Charleston.
That upset left Williams saying she felt “really dead” and in need of a long layoff, which she duly took up until her return at the Madrid Masters two weeks ago.
She was forced to retire from that tournament at the quarter-final stage with an injured left leg, casting renewed doubts on her hopes of winning a third French Open title.
But her romp in Rome just a week later restored her as favourite to win in Paris.
“I feel better but I am not 100 per cent. I am going on adrenaline at the moment, so I’ll take a couple of days off,” Williams said.
One more grand slam win would have great significance for Williams as it would put her level with legends Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova on the all-time winners list with 18 singles titles, and leave her just four shy of the Open-era record held by Steffi Graf.
Williams should be too tough a prospect for the rest of the French Open field, especially in the absence through injury of Victoria Azarenka, the former world No.1 who has given the American plenty of trouble.
On the face of it fellow 32-year-old Li Na, the second seed, is best placed to take advantage of any waverings from the American.
The Chinese icon, won the second grand slam title of her career at the Australian Open four months ago, her first being her historic triumph in the French Open in 2011.
But Li lost 7-5 6-1 to Williams the last time the two played each other in the final at Miami in March and her claycourt form of late has been patchy.
She is a proven winner at Roland Garros though and can count on the Paris crowd being firmly on her side should the seedings hold up and the pair meet again in the final on June 7.
Four other former winners will be in the field, with both Maria Sharapova (2012 winner) and Ana Ivanovic (2008) capable of going all the way once again.
A late covert to claycourt tennis, Sharapova won back-to-back titles in Stuttgart and Madrid in the buildup to Paris before losing to Ivanovic in the second round in Rome.
Ivanovic was the only player to take a set off Williams in Rome and has been showing signs lately that she is beginning to rediscover the kind of form that made her world No.1 in 2008, the year of her French Open triumph, her only grand slam title to date.
There will also be interest in whether rising stars Simona Halep of Romania and Eugenie Bouchard of Canada can underpin their pedigree by going deep into the tournament for the first time.