Times of Eswatini

Swiatek crushes Gauff

... for second French Open title

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PARIS – Iga Swiatek cruised to her second Roland Garros title by dominating teenager Coco Gauff in the final yesterday, as the world number one claimed her 35th successive victory.

The 21-year-old Polish star stormed to a 6-1, 6-3 win in only 68 minutes on Court Philippe Chatrier, equalling Venus Williams’s record for the longest winning run by a woman in the 21st century.

Swiatek celebrated her sixth straight title this year in the players’ box with her friends and family.

“I told Coco ‘Don’t cry’ and that’s what I am doing. Congrats to Coco,” said an emotional Swiatek.

“You are doing an amazing job. At your age, I was on my first-year on tour and I did not know what I was doing. You will find it, I am sure of that.”

A disconsola­te Gauff was left sitting on her seat in tears after a nervous performanc­e, punctuated by 23 unforced errors and three double faults.

The 18-year-old American came up short in her bid to become the youngest Grand Slam singles champion since Maria Sharapova won Wimbledon in 2004.

THANKED HER TEAM

“I want to congratula­te Iga, what you’ve done on tour in these past couple of months has been amazing,” said Gauff, as the tears flowed again when she thanked her team.

“I hope we can play in more finals and maybe I can win one... I want to thank my team, I’m sorry I couldn’t get this one today.”

Swiatek, only the 10th woman to win multiple French Opens in the Open era, lost just one set in the tournament -- against China’s Zheng Qinwen in the fourth round.

She has now won all three of her career meetings with Gauff, who was playing in her first major final.

Gauff will now turn her attentions to Sunday’s doubles final, where she will face home favourites Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic alongside compatriot Jessica Pegula.

Swiatek improved her remarkable record in finals, having won her last nine on the WTA Tour.

Swiatek expressed her support for Ukraine during the trophy presentati­on, despite saying before the final that she does not feel ready to speak about offcourt issues.

“I want to say to Ukraine, ‘Stay strong’. The war is still there,” she said, to cheers from the stands.

Gauff looked nervous in the opening exchanges and a flurry of unforced errors handed Swiatek a break in the very first game.

The 18th seed found herself 3-0 and a double break down just 16 minutes into the match, as Swiatek’s powerful backhand helped her win a lengthy third game on her fifth break point.

Gauff finally got on the board with a scrappy hold to the delight of the crowd, but she had dropped a set for the first time in the tournament just minutes later.

 ?? (Pic: Daily Mail) ?? Unassuming she may be, but Iga Swiatek’s claims to be the superstar of women’s tennis look unarguable. She won her second French Open title in three years by rattling through teenager challenger Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-3 in only 67 minutes. In doing so she claimed her 35th consecutiv­e victory going back to mid-February, equalling the sequences achieved by the two Williams sisters at their peak.
(Pic: Daily Mail) Unassuming she may be, but Iga Swiatek’s claims to be the superstar of women’s tennis look unarguable. She won her second French Open title in three years by rattling through teenager challenger Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-3 in only 67 minutes. In doing so she claimed her 35th consecutiv­e victory going back to mid-February, equalling the sequences achieved by the two Williams sisters at their peak.

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