Dayton Daily News

All eyes on Coco in Wimbledon Week 2

- By Howard Fendrich

WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND — Mom and racket-holding Dad joined two coaches and a hitting partner at Coco Gauff ’s practice session on a cloudy Sunday afternoon at the All England Club as the 15-yearold American prepared for what could be the toughest test yet of her hard-to-believe Grand Slam debut.

A qualifier who is ranked 313th and the youngest player to make it to Week 2 at Wimbledon since Jennifer Capriati in 1991, Gauff put in extra work on her forehand as she got ready to face former No. 1 Simona Halep in the most-anticipate­d matchup of the fourth round when the tournament resumes Monday.

“I don’t know a lot about her,” said Halep, the 2018 French Open champion.

For all that she’s already accomplish­ed over the past 1½ weeks — including a victory over seven-time major champion Venus Williams — and all of the attention she’s received — messages via social media from Michelle Obama, Beyonce’s mother and singer Jaden Smith thrilled her the most — what truly stands out about Gauff is her composure on and off the tennis court.

“You can kind of fake it ‘til you make it,” said Gauff, who lives in Delray Beach, Florida. “But I’m not faking it, at least right now.”

She was never overwhelme­d against Williams, someone she has grown up admiring. She spoke about resetting her mind after that, and won her next match in straight sets, too, against a past Wimbledon semifinali­st. And in the third round, at Centre Court, Gauff was not bothered by twice being a point from losing.

“My parents are just telling me to stay calm, stay focused, because the tournament is not over yet,” Gauff said. “That’s why I’ve been kind of celebratin­g the night after the matches, then the next day back to practice.”

That’s the sort of levelheade­dness that could help her turn what right now is a brief, magical run into a lengthy, successful career.

“This is the easy part,” said Tracy Austin, who watched part of Gauff ’s training session. “As she said, before she played Venus, she had one little boy ask her for a picture. And then after she beat Venus, everybody wanted her autograph, which is great, but just shows how well-known she is. And with that, now come all the expectatio­ns.” Austin can relate.

She turned pro at age 15 in October 1978 and won her first singles title that month.

A year later, at 16, she reached the semifinals at Wimbledon, then beat Martina Navratilov­a and Chris Evert along the way to becoming the youngest U.S. Open champion in history. She won that major championsh­ip again two years later.

“I just really hope that she has solid people around her, meaning her parents — they seem amazing — and coaches, agents, that make sure she just goes slow enough. You don’t need to grab everything. Make sure she has time to just be a kid. Carve out enough time for her to be a kid,” said Austin.

“You can’t do all the endorsemen­ts. You’ve got to pick certain ones. First and foremost, she’s a tennis player who is coming into her own. And I hope the media, because she’s had great success here, doesn’t push her too fast and expect too much, too soon,” Austin said. “She’s still developing. She’s got 15 years ahead of her, if she wants. Maybe 20 years.”

Gauff — her given name is Cori but she prefers Coco — gets plenty of help.

Since she was 10, she has worked with the French tennis academy run by Serena Williams’ coach, Patrick Mouratoglo­u. Since 2017, the year Gauff was the junior runner-up at the U.S. Open at 13, she has been represente­d by the management company co-founded by Roger Federer and his longtime agent, Tony Godsick. Before each match, Gauff said, she’s been speaking to Godsick’s wife, Mary Joe Fernandez, who won a U.S. Open match less than two weeks after turning 14 and went on to reach three Grand Slam singles finals.

Gauff ’s parents were athletes in college: Mother Candi ran track at Florida State; father Corey played basketball at Georgia State.

“They have the biggest input, especially my mom. She definitely changed my mindset . ... My dad, he’s the reason why I dream so big,” Gauff said. “I think the kind

LOOKAHEAD TO TODAY’S MATCHES

The start of Week 2 at Wimbledon is known as “Manic Monday,” because it’s the only Grand Slam tournament that traditiona­lly takes the middle Sunday off and, therefore, the only one that schedules all 16 men’s and women’s fourth-round matches on a single day.

WOMEN’S STAT OF THE DAY

95 — Match wins for Serena Williams at Wimbledon, where she is a seven-time singles champion; the eight women left on the bottom half of the draw have a combined 61 match wins at the All England Club.

MEN’S STAT OF THE DAY

— Number of the 16 remaining men who are at least 30 years old, the first time there have been more of them than men under 30 in the fourth round at Wimbledon in the profession­al era.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“There’s some 15-yearolds, like me, who wouldn’t know what to do at Wimbledon. Then you have a 15-year-old like Coco, who knows what to do.” — Serena Williams on Coco Gauff, the youngest player to reach Week 2 at the All England Club since 1991.

ASSOCIATED PRESS of ‘believing part’ of my dad and the more ‘stay focused, stay calm’ of my mom is like a good mix.”

Sure is working thus far.

 ?? SHAUN BOTTERILL / GETTY IMAGES ?? American Coco Gauff celebrates match point during her third-round Wimbledon match Friday against Polona Hercog at All England Club in London. She plays former No. 1 Simona Halep today.
SHAUN BOTTERILL / GETTY IMAGES American Coco Gauff celebrates match point during her third-round Wimbledon match Friday against Polona Hercog at All England Club in London. She plays former No. 1 Simona Halep today.

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