RIGA, Latvia — Make it big for Latvia and they do not wait long to mark the occasion.

Last June in Paris, the unseeded Jelena Ostapenko, barely 20 years old, aimed fearlessly for the lines at the French Open and hit just enough of them to win not only her first Grand Slam title but her first tour singles title.

By November, her home club, Enri, had inaugurated a new indoor facility named “A. Ostapenko Halle” with her own reserved practice court. (She prefers to be called Alona instead of Jelena, her given name.)

The club also has installed a multimedia exhibit dedicated to her still-brief career, complete with a teddy bear won at the Wimbledon junior tournament, a congratulatory letter from Latvia’s president, her French Open trophy and a video screen that shows in a continuous loop the broadcast of her upset victory over Simona Halep in the final in Paris.

Over the top? Perhaps. But then again no Latvian tennis club has ever had a member quite like Ostapenko, the first Grand Slam singles champion in the Baltic nation’s turbulent history.