Breaking News: Coco Gauff displays a remorseful attitude as Aryna Sabalenka’s withdrawal from Wimbledon due to…

Breaking News: Coco Gauff displays a remorseful attitude as Aryna Sabalenka’s withdrawal from Wimbledon due to…

 

Coco Gauff expressed her disappointment over Aryna Sabalenka’s withdrawal from Wimbledon, despite the draw becoming more open for players without the presence of the world No. 3. The Belarusian cited a shoulder injury and decided not to take to the court for the first round on Monday.
One of the major beneficiaries is world No. 2 Gauff, who has seen several seeded players on her side of the draw exit the competition due to defeats or injuries. The 2-time Australian Open champion is not the only seed to withdraw before the tournament, as her compatriot Victoria Azarenka and grass-specialist Ekaterina Alexandrova also couldn’t debut in the tournament.

Gauff reflects on open draw after Sabalenka’s exit

While a potential semifinal clash between Gauff and Sabalenka was anticipated, the draw now appears more open for players in the bottom half. Several surprising first-round defeats have eliminated players like Zheng Qinwen (8th), Mirra Andreeva (24th), and Sorana Cirstea (29th).
Coco Gauff addresses how she deals with harassment from gamblers on social mediaCoco Gauff addresses how she deals with harassment from gamblers on social media
Currently, Gauff avoids a matchup against any of the 32 seeds until the fourth round, where a potential clash against Emma Navarro (19th) looms. After that, the main contenders include 7th seed Jasmine Paolini as a possible quarterfinal opponent and Maria Sakkari (9th) in the semifinals, assuming no further surprising upsets occur.
However, the 20-year-old American lamented Sabalenka’s withdrawal and downplayed the potential semifinal clash: “I mean, I wouldn’t have probably played her till the semis. At that point, it’s just like this is the semifinals of a Grand Slam. No matter who you play, it’s going to be a tough person to play,” the world No. 2 said. “But it is unfortunate that she had to pull out. She’s always a contender in every slam and every surface. She’s such a competitor. She’s a nice person.”
sabalenkagauffaustralianopen 2024

Sabalenka defeats Gauff in Australian Open semi-finals en route to her second Grand Slam title.

“I hate to see her not be able to play, especially it being such a last-minute type thing. I think she was healthy up until Berlin, at least that’s my understanding. So hopefully she’s able to get back ready,” Coco Gauff added. “I don’t think she’s playing Olympics, so she’ll have some time to be ready for the hard court swing.”
Wimbledon Women's Draw Breakdown: Andy Roddick predicts an American upsetting Swiatek in semis and an early exit for JabeurWimbledon Women’s Draw Breakdown: Andy Roddick predicts an American upsetting Swiatek in semis and an early exit for Jabeur
“Heartbroken to have to tell you all that I won’t be able to play the Championships this year,” Sabalenka stated few hours before her first round clash. “This tournament means so much to me and I promise I’ll be back stronger than ever next year.”
Sabalenka, who was defending last year’s semifinals, will lose 780 points in the WTA rankings, further distancing her from world No. 2 Gauff. There is almost a 1000-point gap between them in the Live Rankings. However, her good distance from No. 4 Elena Rybakina keeps her in a strong position, as the only way Sabalenka would fall in the rankings is if Rybakina wins the title. Otherwise, she will remain world No. 3 heading into the next hard-court swing.

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Sabalenka Aryna
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Heartbroken to have to tell you all that I won’t be able to play The Championships this year. I tried everything to get myself ready but unfortunately my shoulder is not cooperating. This tournament means so much to me and I promise I’ll be back stronger than ever next year. ❤️

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Coco Gauff made up for a disappointing exit from the 2023 Wimbledon Championships in style on Monday, storming past Caroline Dolehide, 6-1, 6-2.

“Last year I lost first round here, and it was a very tough moment for me,” Gauff said on court. “I’m a little bit emotional because it’s been a long year but it’s incredible how I was able to turn it around.”

Gauff first announced herself to the tennis world back in 2019 when she roared into the fourth round with a win over Venus Williams, but she stumbled out of SW19 at the first hurdle 12 months ago to Sofia Kenin. The defeat led Gauff to shake up her team and hire coach Brad Gilbert, a move that inspired a run of form that took her to a maiden major victory at the US Open and a new plateau of Grand Slam consistency. Up against another countrywoman in Dolehide, the No. 2 seed began her campaign for a fourth straight semifinal after an 64-minute victory on Centre Court.

RESULT
R128Women’s Singles

The two were facing off at a major for the second time this year, with Gauff defeating Dolehide at the Australian Open as part of her 12-match Grand Slam streak that ended in the semifinals to eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka. With both Sabalenka and projected fourth-round opponent Victoria Azarenka out of the Championships due to shoulder injuries, the 20-year-old emerged on court looking like an even clearer favorite to go deep at the only major where she is yet to reach the semifinals.

Coming off a solid run to the Bad Homburg Open powered by Solarwatt, Gauff had the grass firmly under her feet as she breezed through the opening set and taking a 4-0 lead in the second. Posting strong serve numbers after dealing with the yips during the clay-court season, she dropped just three points behind her first serve on the day.

Dolehide, who made her WTA breakthrough last fall when she reached her first 1000-level final in Guadalajara, showed remarkable fight on the brink of defeat, breaking serve for the first time in the match to get on the board and holding to further reduce the deficit.

Rather than tighten up, Gauff got stronger in reply, holding for 5-2 and earning a match point on Dolehide’s typically formidable serve. Dolehide saved one when Gauff overpressed off the forehand side but the No. 2 seed wouldn’t be denied, quickly engineering a second match point and converting to book her spot in the second round.

Awaiting her there will be Romanian qualifier Anca Todoni, who edged past lucky loser Olga Danilovic in straight sets earlier on Monday.

Sebastian Korda stood at the back of Court 16 and shook his head. He mumbled and grumbled to himself. He sat down in his sideline chair, before getting up and walking to the other side of the net. He paced and grumbled some more.

It was easy to understand his frustration. Two days earlier, he had expected to play Alejandro Davidovich Fokina in the first round. The Spaniard is no slouch, but Korda would have liked his chances. The American has a 2-0 record against Davidovich Fokina, and he beat him 6-1, 6-2 in Monte Carlo in April.

Beyond that, the 20th-seeded Korda had played some promising grass-court tennis over the past three weeks, reaching the final in s’Hertogenbosch, and the semis at Queen’s. His Wimbledon draw was equally promising; he had landed far from Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, and Novak Djokovic. The highest seed in his section, Andrey Rublev, lost today.

But as Korda stalked the back of the court, all of those auspicious things had vanished. Davidovich Fokina had pulled out with an injury, and was replaced by perhaps the last lucky loser anyone would want to face: the walking ace machine known as Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard. Even worse, Korda had just watched Mpetshi Perricard save a set point with a mind-bogglingly self-assured, 130-m.p.h. second-serve ace down the T, and go on to steal the set from him, 8-6 in a tiebreaker.

Mpetshi Perricard began the year ranked No. 205; he's currently at career-high No. 58.

Mpetshi Perricard began the year ranked No. 205; he’s currently at career-high No. 58.

Mpetshi Perricard’s name might be mouthful, but you might as well get used to saying it—and to seeing him belt serves past his opponents by the bucket full. He’s 20, he’s French, he’s 6-foot-8, he just cracked the Top 60, and two months ago he came out of qualifying to win his first title, in his hometown of Lyon. Mpetshi Perricard has been called the future of tennis by more than one close observer of the sport.

To understand why, you have to see him play. He may be the most athletic player of his height or above that we’ve seen so far. He combines that height with a smooth service motion and an explosive wrist snap. More than other serve-bots past, though, he also has a knockout forehand, a decent amount of speed, and a willingness to come to net. Interestingly, but perhaps unfortunately, he also has a one-handed backhand.

None of that, naturally, made Korda’s day. The two traded service holds and screaming winners for four rain-delayed sets. All four went to tiebreakers, and all four of those breakers were decided by two points or less. When they were over, the score stood at two-sets all. As close as the match was, the safe money likely would have been on Korda to win the fifth. He’s the more experienced player, he had just snuck through a 9-7 fourth-set tiebreaker, and last month at Roland Garros, Mpetshi Perricard, who had never won a main-draw match at a major before today, lost a similarly epic five-setter to David Goffin.

Despite all of that, it was Mpetshi Perricard who prevailed. As is often the case with a monster server, it took just a couple of moments of inspiration, combined with a nervous slip from his opponent, to put the match in Mpetshi Perricard’s hands. With Korda serving at 0-1 in the fifth, Mpetshi Perricard hit a running forehand pass; made a nice reflex backhand that landed near the baseline; and watched as Korda missed an easy forehand long at break point.

That was it. Mpetshi Perricard’s serve essentially did the rest. Down 0-30 at 2-0, he hit two service winners and an ace to hold. In the final game, he drilled three aces and a service winner. For the match, he had 51 aces, 93 winners, was 37 of 57 at net, and saved all 11 break points he faced.

Asked by Tennis Channel what he was thinking on those break points, Mpetshi Perricard had an admirably straightforward answer:

“Try not to lose the point,” he said with a laugh. “My game plan, I will serve up the T or out wide, and I will go to the net as quickly as I can.”

“I’m very proud of myself to win those key moments of the match.”

Mpetshi Perricard’s father was a semi-pro soccer player, but he says his mother is his hero, for supporting him when he left home in Lyon to live at the French federation’s training center in Paris.

RESULT

R128Men’s Singles

After losing his final qualifying match last week, Mpetshi Perricard said he thought he would “never be able to play Wimbledon.” When he found  out he was a lucky loser, he said he “was very happy to be able to play at least one match at Wimbledon.”

Now he’ll get to play at least one more this year, against Yoshihito Nishioka; if he wins that, he might face Stefanos Tsitsipas in the third round.

Is Mpetshi Perricard the future? Is he more than an ace machine? His return will need work, but his athleticism should make him more than a new-model Milos Raonic or John Isner. In the one game where he broke Korda, he came up with two brilliant shots on the run, and finished another point at the net. His volleys will also need work, but he gets himself there more quickly and more often than a lot of other 6-foot-8 types of the recent past. With his steamroller serve, just a flash of brilliance here and there may be all he needs.

As for now, Mpetshi Perricard isn’t worrying about the future as much as he is savoring the present.

“The strawberries are nice,” he said of being at Wimbledon. “And the grass is amazing.”

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