Skip to Content
Newsletter

Coco Gauff is Panning Out

[vc_empty_space height="5px"]

By Giri Nathan

[vc_empty_space height="15px"]There are plenty of reasons to give up on tennis. Each of them is a crater, with a would-be prodigy curled up inside. Whether it’s the physical toll of a never-ending tour, some of the most diseased parental relationships in sporting history, or the pressures of an international hype complex, there are so many ways to burn out. And if the standard is “becoming one of the best ever to play,” as it so insistently seems to be, I’d bet on any given teenager to fail. Just count it as a victory if they’ve managed to hold on to any sense of self. I know, as a complicit party, that that hype machine is always stupid and often sad—which doesn’t mean that I’m too good to resist its rewards. Let’s go, Coco! How refreshing is it to see one teen begin to deliver on all these impossible expectations, just a couple weeks removed from her high school graduation, with an eerily evenhanded perspective on her career? Let her many successors bear the crushing weight of the comparisons; enjoy the show for now.

Coco Gauff set a potential trap for herself by being so good so early in her tennis life. Become the No. 1 junior, win a junior Slam, make the fourth round of a real Slam at age 15—beating Venus Williams to do it—and you’ve hurtled well past the last exit to a (relatively) normal childhood. From there it’s Roger Federer’s pasta sponsorship, and an Arthur Ashe for your Naomi Osaka matchup, and potentially years and years of wondering if things will ever break the way everyone around you seems to expect them to. Barely three years after that breakout Wimbledon, Gauff has already secured a spot in the final at Roland-Garros. Her growth has been incremental. Last year she made the quarterfinal here, as clay seemed to really click as the right surface for her unbelievable mobility. She followed that up with a strong fourth-round repeat at Wimbledon. Late in the season she cracked the top 20. She has been winning steadily, if not as explosively and eye-catchingly as her initial debut seemed to augur. Her game will always rest on the floor of an elite defense, and if her technical and tactical improvements continue apace, this should be just the first of many major finals.

It’s been a remarkable tournament for Gauff on many levels. For one: She has a chance at two Roland-Garros titles this weekend. Partnering with Jessica Pegula—who made a deep singles run of her own—Gauff made it to the semifinals, where they beat compatriots Madison Keys and Taylor Townsend in straight sets.  ​(“I feel like she’s been 18 for, like, five years. I’m like, ‘Coco, you’re like a veteran,’” said Pegula of her partner.) For another: Gauff still hasn’t even dropped a set in singles. She’s kept her matches clean and uncomplicated, baking two bagels and two breadsticks. There’s a caveat here, which is that she was able to dodge the four highest-seeded players in her half, all of whom crashed in rounds 1 and 2. Sloane Stephens, briefly slipping into world-beating mode as she occasionally deigns to do, was Gauff’s greatest test so far; she too was swept aside in the quarterfinal. If you think that this was an easy road and her results this week have outpaced Coco’s underlying skill level—this may well be true—there’s no better measuring stick than a matchup against Iga Swiatek. Awaiting Gauff is the world No. 1, riding a ridiculous 34-match win streak, looking to close out a tournament she’s won before. Taking even a set off Swiatek would be a heartening sign of progress. Taking two might call for a total reevaluation of the player she is right now, and still could be.[vc_empty_space height="15px"]Above: Coco ascendant. (Getty) 

[vc_column width="1/6"][vc_tweetmeme share_via="racqetmagazine"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_facebook type="button_count"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_column width="1/6"][vc_empty_space height="45px"][vc_column width="1/4"][vc_column width="1/2"]

NOW AVAILABLE
Issue No. 19

racquet_issue-19

[vc_btn title="BUY NOW" style="outline" shape="square" color="success" size="lg" align="center" button_block="true" link="url:https%3A%2F%2Fracquetmag.com%2Fproduct%2Fissue-no-19%2F|title:GET%20IT%20NOW||"][vc_column width="1/4"]

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Racquet

Queen Vee: Venus Williams Redefines Tennis Longevity in D.C.

Rennae and Andrea are all over Washington DC, the kickoff to the US hardcourt swing. Starting with the inimitable Venus Williams—say that five times fast if you're German—who came out swinging against Peyton Stearns and notched her first tour-level win in two years, as well as check ins on Emma Radacanu, Taylor Fritz and Perennial dark horse Ben Shelton. Plus: in a bonus mini-episode, Rennae is live and direct with Canadian sensation Gabriel Diallo behind the scenes of the Citi Open.

July 23, 2025

Tennis Smells Different to Everybody

 In 1987, the Australian poet Clive James demanded that he be brought the sweat of Argentinian tennis icon Gabriela Sabatini, writing “For I know it tastes as pure as Malvern water, Though laced with bright bubbles like the acqua minerale.”

July 14, 2025

How to be a Good Loser (If You Have to Be) 

Because winning is the point of everything, we’ve all been taught, in some way or another, how to do it—instructions we carry out with varying degrees of success.

July 8, 2025

The True Tennis Heads of Wimbledon

Every year, a bunch of 20-somethings with national rankings make the data calls in SW19.

July 3, 2025

Wimbledon: Daily Scene Report

During the fortnight, we've got photographers Nick Pachelli and Maia Flore taking in the sights, scenes and spectacles on the grounds at the All England Lawn & Tennis Club. Follow along for the highs, the lows and (of course) the whoas from SW19.

July 2, 2025
See all posts