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Coco Gauff informed she has a ‘real problem’ as two areas she must improve are identified

Coco Gauff is safely through to the semi-final of the Wuhan Open, but the American has been urged to improve two parts of her game.

Gauff has come through a difficult draw in Wuhan to continue her excellent form on the WTA Tour’s Asian leg.

The American has defeated Laura Siegemund, Zhang Shuai, and Moyuka Uchijima at the Wuhan Open, and she has dropped just nine games in the process.

Coco Gauff says the China Open feels like a 'practice tournament' as she  admits she doesn't know how to feel right now

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Despite her dominance in Wuhan, Sky Sports commentator Colin Fleming has pointed out two areas where Gauff can improve.

Colin Fleming urges Coco Gauff to improve her second serve and forehand

Gauff has already won several Grand Slams, but she’s never been able to capture the top spot of the WTA Tour rankings.

Fleming believes that Gauff must work on her second serve, as well as her forehand, in order to challenge Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka at the top.

“You look at the top 50 WTA players this season, Coco Gauff has won 43% of second serve points in total. That puts her 47 out of 50, which for someone of her ranking is a real problem,” said Fleming on Sky Sports commentary duties.

The star’s double faults have become an unfortunate part of the American’s game, but Fleming pointed out one silver lining.

“When the second serve has gone into play, she’s won 58% of those points, which puts her third out of the top 50. So if she can just get a more reliable second serve, it’s huge for her,” he said.

“You’re talking more slams, you’re talking push toward World No. 1, and if you can do the same and make the forehand just a little bit more reliable and cleaner, then you’re seriously in business.”

“The strengths are there for all to see: the movement, the fighting spirit, her ability to figure matches out, her backhand, her volleys. So many strengths.”

Gauff is currently World No. 3 and captured her second Grand Slam of her career at Roland Garros earlier this year.

Coco Gauff reaches 12th WTA-1000 semi-final

Despite her experience on the tour, Gauff is still only 21 years old and her latest win in Wuhan has broken another Serena Williams and Venus Williams record.

Gauff’s route to the final four of the Wuhan Open is the 12th WTA 1000 semi-final of her career, which is one more than the Williams sisters before they were 22.

However, Gauff has only managed to turn two of those semi-final appearances into wins, at the 2023 Cincinnati Open and the 2024 China Open.

The American has also lost two WTA 1000 finals this year at the Madrid Open to Sabalenka and the Italian Open to Jasmine Paolini.

Coco Gauff was ‘obsessed’ with one item of clothing – until her Mom told her to change

Coco Gauff has opened up on her fashion choices and revealed her mother needed to step in when she became a little too obsessed with hoodies.

The French Open champion stormed to a comfortable 6-1, 6-0 win over Uchijima Moyuka in her first match at the Wuhan Open on Wednesday, as she coped well in sweltering hot conditions that have proved to be too much some other players in the draw.

Coco Gauff

READ: Coco Gauff beats Serena Williams and Venus Williams’ achievement with her latest win at the China Open

Responding to a question from Tennis365 in Wuhan, Gauff opened up on her passion for fashion, as she revealed her tastes have evolved over the years with the input of her mother.

“I used to be a hoodie connoisseur. I owned, like, 70-something hoodies,” she said.

“My mom had told me I had to stop buying hoodies and then, I don’t know. I think when I turned, like maybe 17 or 18, I just stopped.

 

“Honestly, now I don’t really grab a hoodie unless I go to the airport. But yeah, I think that was just kind of like I didn’t know what my fashion was going to be. So I feel like I was just conserving myself.

“I’m a lot more expressive of what I wear on and off the court and yeah, it’s really fun. I like wearing clothes. I’m not very talented in a lot of things, so I think clothes are just a way to express myself.”

When asked what her favourite clothing is now, Gauff suggested she is widening her options.

“It just depends on the mood. Some days I wake up feeling really feminine and feel like wearing skirts and stuff, and other days I wake up feeling like a tomboy,” she said.

“It just kind of depends on what my mood is, which is why it’s like always hard for me to plan outfits in advance because I never know what I’m going to feel like in the moment.”

Gauff has a role in the design of the clothing she wears on court with her sponsors New Balance and enjoys the input she has into that process.

“New Balance and I work really close together with them,” she said. “I don’t design every kit, not everything, but a lot of the things we do are inspirations of things that I pull from fashion, like magazines or stuff off court and things like that.

“One of the things that I was really like part of was the one I wore at Wimbledon. I really wanted to wear lace on the court, and it was so beautiful. I wish I could have played longer in it.

“Next year I want to try a corset situation with a little less lace, so we’ll see. But I’m definitely involved in the process, but I don’t do everything, though.”

Gauff is a huge attraction during the Asian swing of the WTA Tour, with big cheers everywhere she goes in Wuhan this week.

How Gauff went from a ‘hoodie connoisseur’ to a fashion-forward trendsetter

Over the course of her career, as Coco Gauff’s game has evolved, so too has her fashion sense.

She’s now regarded as one of the most fashion-forward players on the Hologic WTA Tour, a true trendsetter. It’s quite a long way from when she first turned pro back in 2018, when she lived and died by the hoodie.

“I used to be a hoodie connoisseur,” the World No. 3 said ahead of her opening-round match at this week’s Wuhan Open. “I owned, like, 70-something hoodies and having all those … it was really bad. My mom had told me I had to stop buying hoodies. And then, when I turned maybe 17 or 18, I just stopped. And now I don’t really grab a hoodie unless I go to the airport. But yeah, I didn’t know what my fashion was going to be, so I feel like I was just conserving myself.

Coco Gauff Launches Tenniscore Collection With New Balance & Miu Miu

 

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“Now I’m a lot more expressive of what I wear on and off the court. It’s really fun. I like wearing clothes. I’m not very talented in a lot of things, so I think clothes is just a way to express myself.”

We’d argue Gauff’s lack of talent argument, as she’s won two Grand Slam titles and is firmly entrenched in the Top 5 ahead of the year-end WTA Finals in Riyadh, where she’s already qualified and is the defending champion.

As for her fashion on court, it’s been on point (and very intentional). The American has worn a different outfit at every tournament she’s played in this year, each of which has received rave reviews.

As for her wardrobe off the court, she doesn’t plan much in advance. Gauff takes an organic, in-the-moment approach: How she feels when she gets out of bed dictates her choice for the day.

“It just depends on the mood,” the 21-year-old said. “Some days I wake up feeling really feminine and [I want to wear] skirts and stuff. Other days I wake up feeling like a tomboy. It just kind of depends on what my mood is, which is why it’s always hard for me to plan outfits in advance. I never know what I’m going to feel like in the moment.”

The French Open champion arrives in Wuhan coming off a semifinal showing in Beijing, where she lost in straight sets to eventual champion Amanda Anisimova.

She received a bye in the first round of Wuhan, the final WTA 1000 tournament of 2025, and will play unseeded Moyuka Uchijima in the second round.

Coco Gauff confirmed her place in the China Open semi-finals, and she did so by toppling a record by Serena and Venus Williams.

Gauff has led an American charge at the China Open and she continued her campaign with a quarter-final victory over Eva Lys.

The American defeated Lys in straight sets and she will face either Jasmine Paolini or Amanda Anisimova in the final four.

Coco Gauff emulates Serena & Venus Williams Indian Wells milestones

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With her latest win, Gauff broke an impressive record that both Williams sisters had notched in their careers.

Coco Gauff reaches 11 WTA 1000 semi-finals younger than Venus and Serena Williams

Gauff’s China Open semi-final is the eleventh of her illustrious career and she’s reached them at a younger age than two of the greatest players of all time.

At 21 years and 195 days, the American has reached 11 semi-finals at a WTA 1000 event at a younger age than both of the Williams sisters.

Venus Williams achieved the feat at 21 years and 274 days, while Serena did so slightly younger at 21 years and 228 days.

The only two players to achieve the feat at a younger age than Gauff are Maria Sharapova and Martina Hingis.

Both of those stars captured five Grand Slam events, a feat Gauff may go on to achieve in her tennis career.

Coco Gauff continues incredible record at the China Open

The 2025 China Open is the American’s third time at the Beijing tournament, and she’s only suffered one loss so far.

The star is 14-1 in Beijing after winning the tournament in 2024 and reaching the semi-finals the year prior.

The only player to beat Gauff at the China Open is World No. 2 Iga Swiatek, who dispatched the American in straight sets in 2023.

Gauff has defeated the likes of Maria Sakkari, Paula Badosa, and Karolína Muchová throughout her dominant runs in Beijing.

Coco Gauff makes brutally honest confession ahead of Beijing title defense

Coco Gauff seemingly doesn’t have much expectation for her Beijing title defense as the world No. 3 admits she “does not feel like the defending champion” and suggests she will use the event as “a practice tournament.”

As you probably know, Gauff lifted her second Grand Slam title at the French Open. But since then, it has been a rough couple of months for the American tennis star, which led to a coaching shakeup just before the US Open and adding a biomechanics coach to help her fix her serving woes.

Coco Gauff

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At the US Open, Gauff was evidently thinking too much about her serve and just being focused on not making too many errors. Still, the home star reached the round-of-16 before losing to Naomi Osaka. Now, in what will be her second tournament since hiring biomechanics expert Gavin MacMillan, the 21-year-old is keeping her expectations low.

Gauff: I don’t feel like the defending Beijing champion… It will be like a practice tournament

“Although technically I’m the defending champion [in Beijing], it doesn’t feel like that at all. I don’t want to say ‘not care’ because obviously I’m not playing a tournament and trying to lose or anything… But yeah, there is definitely a weight that you kind of just don’t care in a way, especially when you’ve had like a good moment of the season. I think winning the French Open helped me take that weight off less,” the world No. 3 explained.

“I think last year, I did care, but maybe I felt a little bit like I had to do something, because I hadn’t won a big title at that point, at that time of the year yet. I don’t know how I feel right now. I definitely feel a lot lighter. It feels, again, like a practice tournament. So we’ll see how it goes.”

In some way, Gauff’s statement makes sense as she is aware that she needs time to implement changes to her new serve and have it clicking. Before that happens, the American will likely keep her expectations low.

After a first-round bye in Beijing, No. 2 seed Gauff will take on either Lucia Bronzetti or Kamilla Rakhimova in the second round.

Challenging Sign: Raducanu ‘getting back to best’ but edged out by Sabalenka

Britain’s Emma Raducanu fell agonisingly short of beating world number one Aryna Sabalenka and earning a statement win at the Cincinnati Open.

Raducanu, 22, lost 7-6 (7-3) 4-6 7-6 (7-5) as defending champion Sabalenka edged a battle lasting more than three hours to reach the fourth round.

Having also pushed Sabalenka at Wimbledon, Raducanu’s performance was further evidence she can severely test the world’s best as her revival continues.

This season, with the British number one’s fitness issues largely behind her and the development of greater resilience, she has climbed back into the top 40.

“As I said at Wimbledon I am really happy to see her healthy – mentally and physically,” said Sabalenka.

“Every time she is improving and I can see she is getting back to her best.

“I’m enjoying fighting against her – she is such an incredible player.”

Raducanu could be seeded among the leading 32 players at the upcoming US Open, providing a more favourable draw – in theory at least – at the hard-court Grand Slam which she won as a teenage qualifier in 2021.

READ MORE : ‘He’s More Scared of Us’ – Coco Gauff Details

Coco Gauff

On the basis of this display against Sabalenka, there are plenty of positives for Raducanu to take into the final major of the season.

Signs that Raducanu can challenge the best

With her service game providing a strong foundation, backed by calmness and clarity from the baseline, a tense contest in a sweltering Cincinnati could easily have gone her way.

Sabalenka was well below her best level throughout, with the powerful baseline game which has delivered three major titles looking vulnerable and erratic.

Raducanu, who was guided vocally throughout by her new coach Francisco Roig, took full advantage.

Roig was part of the team which helped Rafael Nadal win the bulk of his 22 major titles, and his forensic attention to detail was clear throughout the match.

Regular instructions came about the pattern of Raducanu’s serve and the shape of her forehand, while she also responded well when he implemented some positive reinforcement.

“You’re better than her,” was one of the 57-year-old Spaniard’s messages to the player.

In the past Raducanu has wilted in similarly intense battles and equally draining conditions.

‘He’s More Scared of Us’ – Coco Gauff Details Alligator Encounter During Bold Florida Trip With Boyfriend Jalen Sera

Coco Gauff recently gave fans a peek into her adventurous side, recalling a close encounter with an alligator during a serene canoe ride in Florida. Following her Wimbledon heartbreak, the 21-year-old enjoyed a nature-filled trip with her boyfriend, Jalen Sera.

What Wild Twist Surprised Coco Gauff and Jalen Sera on Their Florida Trip?

The break came after a tough early exit at Wimbledon, where Gauff suffered a first-round loss to Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska. With her grass-court season cut short, the World No. 2 opted to recharge before the North American hard-court swing.

Coco Gauff Has an Amusing Disagreement With Boyfriend Jalen Sera As Couple  Reunites After Her Paris Return

READ: Coco Gauff still alive in Montreal despite

Her time off included a star-studded date night with boyfriend at Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter Tour in Atlanta and a quiet escape to Central Florida’s springs. The latter, however, brought an unexpected thrill in the form of an alligator sighting during a canoe ride.

The trip allowed her to unwind before key tournaments in Montreal, Cincinnati, and the US Open. Speaking to Tennis Channel’s Prakash Amritraj after her second-round win over Wang Xinyu at the ongoing Cincinnati Open, Gauff shared highlights from her time away. “It was great. I was home, so I was able to get my life organized from being in Europe basically two months. So, I just felt organized,” she said.

“But then, I got to go see Beyoncé, which was really cool. Got to meet Miss Tina, her mom, which was awesome. And we were up there watching, I was in the same area as Tyler Perry and Summer Walker. So, that was also really cool for me.”

Her Florida getaway turned into an unforgettable experience. “We went kayaking. I was out there with the gators. I was swimming in the springs and it was great. I saw a gator like while we were in the kayak,” Gauff recalled.

When asked if she was afraid, she explained, “No. I trusted our guide, and he was like, ‘If you don’t bother them, they won’t bother you.’ And we were swimming in the same direction, and then the gator kind of saw that, and then he turned around and went the other way. I think he’s more scared of us. But I was on the kayak, so I felt okay.”

She added: “Now, if I was swimming, which I did, but it was in a different spring where gators are less common, it was cool. It was good to reconnect with nature and yeah, I would do it again.”

Gauff advanced to the third round in Cincinnati, where she will take on 32nd seed Yastremska in a rematch of their Wimbledon clash. The winner of this match will face either Lucia Bronzetti or 23rd seed Jeļena Ostapenko in the Round of 16.

Coco Gauff still alive in Montreal despite singles loss

Coco Gauff is on the rebound. Despite losing to 18-year-old Victoria Mboko in the Canadian Open singles tournament, she will remain in Montreal.

Gauff has qualified for her first Canadian Open doubles final, per George Patten of The Tennis Gazette.

She, along with doubles partner McCartney Kessler, will face the pair of Taylor Townsend and Zhang Shuai. Townsend and Shaui came out on top during the Washington Open.

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Gauff and Kessler scraped by in a tie-breaking (6-4, 3-6, 10-7) semifinal win over Barbora Krejcikova and Jelena Ostapenko.

This will mark the first time Gauff has appeared in a WTA doubles final since 2024. That year, she and Kateřina Siniaková defeated Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini in the French Open.

The Canadian Open has been the opportunity for Gauff to move past her upset at Wimbledon.

She’s also aiming her sights on the US Open, which is scheduled from August 24-September 7 in New York. The biggest highlight for Gauff was winning the French Open singles title.

Oftentimes, Gauff is seen through the lens of what she can do as an individual. But her doubles pedigree is just as impressive.

The doubles career of Coco Gauff

Altogether, Gauff has won 9 WTA doubles titles. She reached the finals of the 2021 U.S. Open and 2022 French Open.

In 2021, Gauff partnered with Venus Williams for the French Open. They lost in the first round to Ellen Perez and Zheng Saisai.

Both times she was partnered with Caty McNally. In terms of growing her game, Over time, Gauff has emphasized the importance of excelling in both singles and doubles.

It turns out, Gauff’s ability to excel in both registers dates back to her junior years. In 2018, Gauff was the Junior World No.1 player.

That year, she won the French Open girl’s singles title. Then, she won the U.S. Open girl’s doubles title.

Coco Gauff Gets Huge Offer From Serena Williams’ Ex-Coach After Canadian Open Setback

Coco Gauff’s serve, once considered one of the most potent weapons in her arsenal, has lately become a major cause of concern for her. Of late, she has struggled with consistency, committing an alarming number of double faults. Last year, she committed 430 double faults in her 71 matches. This year, she has played 44 matches and has committed more than 250 double faults already—42 of them came in just the three singles matches she played in the Canadian Open.

She committed 23 double faults in her opening match against Danielle Collins—the fifth-highest number ever recorded in a WTA Tour match. Last year, when her service struggles cost her the US Open fourth round against Emma Navarro, Rennae Stubbs couldn’t help but flag what she thought were obvious gaps in her technique during an ESPN conversation. And she did that in the presence of the young American’s former coach, Brad Gilbert. “…hard for me to say because Brad [Gilbert] is sitting here…but her technique, the elbow, is too low, the grip is a little weird as well. So it’s hard for her to get that nice first serve and then the same or similar second serve,” Stubbs said. Shortly after that, Gauff and Gilbert went their separate ways.

The kid knows how to fight," Coco Gauff's 'unreal' grit catches Rennae  Stubbs' eye as the American saves 3 incredible match points

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Even recently, after seeing her performance at the Canadian Open, she took a jibe at her current team, featuring Matt Daly and Jean-Christophe Faurel, saying, “I don’t understand why now she has literally two coaches. Nothing has changed on her serve…like the ball toss is so far ahead of her on the second serve.” However, Stubbs isn’t the only one who has criticized Coco Gauff’s coaching team recently. In a recent interview with Tennis 365, Serena Williams’ childhood coach, Rick Macci, expressed his interest in working with the youngster on her biggest weakness. Macci said, “To consult or help someone, obviously right off the bat, it would be Coco Gauff. I mean, there’s no doubt about it, I could flip the script with her second serve and forehand. No doubt about it, but it’d have to be done in the off-season.

Rick Macci’s experience over the past four decades in molding a player is unmatched by any teacher in the tennis world. He has coached the likes of the Williams sisters, Andy Roddick, Maria Sharapova, Jennifer Capriati, and many others in their formative years. During the interview, he spoke about his close involvement with Coco Gauff‘s family and also went on to add how he wants to improve Gauff’s serve, “This has to be science-based, and it has to be done from a biomechanical point of view. And I’ve looked at her serve from every different direction, and right now, because she’s been doing this since a little kid, the muscle memory is baked in extra crispy. She has very, very long arms, she has a very loose arm.

He stated that he would work closely with Dr. Brian Gorden, who has a PhD in Biomechanics, and look to modify Gauff’s technique, even going so far as to claim that Coco Gauff’s constant trouble can be fixed in one hour.

However, this wasn’t the first time that we’ve seen him addressing this issue with Coco Gauff. There have been plenty of instances in the past where we saw Rick Macci speaking about Coco Gauff’s serving woes. Even last year, Macci made this bold claim that Coco Gauff’s serving woes barely require an hour to be fixed.

What does Coco Gauff have to say about her ‘double trouble’?

Victoria Mboko, wrapping up the match against Coco Gauff, within 62 minutes of their R16 clash at the Canadian Open, raised the eyebrows of several tennis bigwigs. She defeated the American by 6-1,6-4, thanks, in no small part, to the 6 double faults and 24 unforced errors that the latter committed.

Although Gauff managed to reduce the numbers quite significantly since her first match against Danielle Collins, there were a few things that rang alarm bells in the mind of BBC commentator, David Law. According to Law, “I was struck by just how lost… she looked confused. She looked about why it’s going wrong. I just detected somebody who is very confused right now, and that must be a horrible feeling when you’re as experienced as Coco Gauff is, that you’ve won two Grand Slams, one of them quite recently. You’ve come off the back of that. Where has the game gone?

David Law was quite surprised by her performance, especially in her match against Danielle Collins. But coming to her duel against the teenager, after the match against Coco Gauff, Victoria Mboko was asked if anything had crossed her mind seeing Gauff make plenty of errors in that match. “Well, I mean, nothing really crosses my mind just because, I mean, that’s the game. People make errors. It happens. I make errors too. So I was just really focused on myself and what I had to do,” said Mboko.

But when it came to sharing her own thoughts on this, Coco Gauff spoke about her serving woes after her match against Veronika Kudermetova. She admitted that she is quite “disappointed” seeing her commit such a large number of double faults in her matches. But the most interesting thing from her statements was Gauff claiming she did well during the practice sessions. “I just would like it to transfer to the match,” said Coco Gauff.

he said that she doesn’t want to lead the stats when it comes to double faults. However, having said that, she also claimed, “I know I probably won’t be ever double fault-free, but if I could get that to 2%, 3%, it would make a big difference in just making these matches a lot easier.

Coco Gauff is now all set to enter the Cincinnati Open, and she has been handed a pretty tricky draw over there.