The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Gauff, 15, gets U.S. Open wildcard entry

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Coco Gauff will get a chance to try for an encore: The 15yearold from Florida received a wildcard entry Tuesday for the U.S. Open’s main draw.

It will be Gauff ’s second Grand Slam tournament. She made a magical run to the fourth round at Wimbledon last month after getting a wild card into the qualifying rounds there.

Ranked just 313th at the time, Gauff became the youngest player to qualify for Wimbledon, upset fivetime champion Venus Williams in the first round and wound up losing at the All England Club to eventual title winner Simona Halep.

Gauff is currently No. 140 in the WTA rankings. She initially made a mark at age 13 by becoming the youngest U.S. Open junior finalist in history; she won the French Open junior title at 14.

Age restrictio­ns set up by the women’s profession­al tour limit the number of tournament­s someone who is 15 can enter and the number of wildcard invitation­s she can be offered — and Gauff already has accepted three wild cards elsewhere. But according to the WTA, the U.S. Tennis Associatio­n — which runs a Grand Slam tournament, and so is not overseen by the WTA or ATP tours — essentiall­y can choose to ignore the eligibilit­y rule and offer Gauff a wild card.

“I want to thank the USTA for the opportunit­y to participat­e in my home slam,” Gauff said in a statement emailed by her agent. “I look forward to playing my first main draw at the U.S. Open.”

Among the other players receiving wild cards from the USTA on Tuesday for the women’s field at Flushing Meadows in New York City were 2011 U.S. Open champion Sam Stosur — an Australian who was granted that country’s reciprocal berth — and 17yearold Caty McNally, an American who won the doubles title with Gauff and reached the singles semifinals at the Citi Open in Washington this month.

Gauff and McNally have said they plan to play doubles together at Flushing Meadows; that event’s wildcard entries will be announced later. The pair won the U.S. Open junior doubles trophy together a year ago.

The draw for the U.S. Open is Aug. 22, and play in the year’s last major tennis tournament begins Aug. 26.

Other women’s wild cards went to Francesca Di Lorenzo, Whitney Osuigwe, Kristie Ahn and Katie Volynets of the U.S., along with 16yearold Diane Parry of France, who got her country’s reciprocal invitation.

Di Lorenzo, a 22yearold from Ohio, is a past NCAA doubles champion now ranked 128th. Osuigwe, a 17yearold from Florida, won a French Open junior title and is ranked 105th. Ahn, a 27yearold from New Jersey, finished first in the USTA’s wildcard challenge, while Volynets, a 17yearold from California, won the 18s national championsh­ip.

Nine wild cards for women’s qualifying were also awarded, including to fivetime Grand Slam doubles champion Bethanie MattekSand­s, 14yearold Reese Brantmeier of Wisconsin, Vicky Duval, Shelby Rogers and Pan Am Games medalist Caroline Dolehide.

Juan Martin del Porto, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, pulled out of the tournament Tuesday because he is still recovering from surgery on his right kneecap. That allowed Denis Kudla, a 26yearold from Virginia who was the highestran­ked man to miss out on making the field via direct acceptance, to get into the main draw just hours after he was announced as a wildcard recipient.

So the USTA announced that Kudla’s wild card would now go to Chris Eubanks, a 23yearold from Georgia. Others getting into the main draw include Americans Jack Sock, Bjorn Fratangelo, Marcos Giron, USTA wildcard challenge winner Ernesto Escobedo and 18s national champion Zachary Svajda, along with Antoine Hoang, who got France’s reciprocal entry. The Australian federation has not announced who will get its men’s wildcard invitation.

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