Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Gauff, 19, comes back and beats Russia's Andreeva, 16

- By Howard Fenderich

PARIS » Not all that long ago, Coco Gauff was always the kid on the court, the unknown underdog, younger and less experience­d than every opponent she faced on a big stage.

Now, still just 19, Gauff is well-versed in the profession­al tennis tour, already a Grand Slam runner-up in singles and doubles, and seeded No. 6 at this French Open. On Saturday at Roland Garros, the American was the veteran in Court Suzanne Lenglen under the cloudless sky, the one with the steady hand and steady head, in an all-teen showdown against Mirra Andreeva, a 16-year-old qualifier from Russia who is ranked 143rd and was making her debut appearance at a major tournament.

After a tight-as-canbe first set, one Gauff was two points from winning but eventually ceded, she grew her game and proved to be the better player. She pulled away to reach the fourth round in Paris with a 6-7 (5), 6-1, 6-1 victory over

Andreeva, who was warned by the chair umpire for unsportsma­nlike conduct after smacking a ball into the stands.

Gauff, who lost to Iga Swiatek in last year's French Open final, might see a bit of herself in Andreeva. She knows what it's like to be the newcomer no one has scouting reports on. What it's like to hear plenty of discussion about her youth. To feel the freedom of performing without the burden of expectatio­ns. Gauff was just 14, after all, when she became the youngest qualifier in Wimbledon history, then beat Venus Williams along the way to the fourth round there in 2019.

So by now, Gauff is a bit tired of that whole subject — which she explained in a good-natured manner Saturday.

“People love to say, `You're only this, you're only that.' When I'm on the court, we're not thinking about our age. I don't think she was thinking, `Oh, I'm only 16 and she's 19, she's older.' If she was thinking that, she wouldn't win a match, because she beat people older than me. And at my age, I wasn't thinking about that,” Gauff said. “I was just thinking about playing the ball. Age is important to mention, sometimes, but as a player, and going through it, yes, it gets a little bit annoying . ... I don't need to be praised because of my age or anything. I prefer just to be praised because of my game.”

Her talent is undeniable, especially when it comes to her serve and backhand, as is her maturity. Against Andreeva, she never let the rough way the first set ended carry over. Indeed, it was Andreeva who sent a ball into the crowd late in the tiebreaker — she was contrite afterward, acknowledg­ing it was a “stupid move” and “really bad” — then bounced her racket off the court early in the second set.

Most of all, Gauff remained patient. After 19 unforced errors in the first set, she made just seven the rest of the way.

Gauff next gets Anna Karolina Schmiedlov­a, a 6-1, 6-3 winner over American qualifier Kayla Day.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? American Coco Gauff lost the first set of her third-round match against fellow teenager Mirra Andreeva of Russia, but Gauff rallied to win in three sets to advance.
CHRISTOPHE ENA – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American Coco Gauff lost the first set of her third-round match against fellow teenager Mirra Andreeva of Russia, but Gauff rallied to win in three sets to advance.

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