The Bakersfield Californian

Andreeva, a teen, wins easily at French Open; Coco Gauff next

- BY HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

PARIS — Mirra Andreeva is the latest teen sensation in tennis, a 16-year-old Russian who is the youngest player to win a match in the women’s main draw at the French Open since 2005.

Do the math: That’s before she was born.

The 143rd-ranked Andreeva made her way through qualifying rounds last week without dropping a set to earn her debut berth in the women’s bracket at a Grand Slam tournament — and she still is making things look easy so far at Roland Garros.

A 6-1, 6-2 victory over Diane Perry of France in 77 minutes on Thursday put her in the third round; that followed a 6-2, 6-1 victory over Alison Riske-Amritraj of the U.S. that lasted 56 minutes.

Next up will be a contest against 2022 French Open runner-up Coco Gauff, who beat Julia Grabher 6-2, 6-3.

Gauff, a 19-yearold American, is seeded No. 6 and made her initial breakthrou­gh by beating Venus Williams en route to the fourth round at Wimbledon at age 14.

Gauff is one of just 12 seeded women left in the field, the fewest to reach the third round at Roland Garros since the number of seeds expanded to 32 in 2002.

Andreeva and Gauff have practiced together, but that won’t mean much Saturday.

“The practice and the match is different, so I might also play different,” Andreeva said. “I don’t know. Who knows?”

She’s played terrifical­ly clean tennis so far, including making a total of 15 unforced errors to 38 for Parry and winning 14 of 21 points that lasted at least nine strokes.

“Really solid for her age. She did everything better than me today,” said the 79th-ranked Parry, who made it to the third round at two majors last season. “She doesn’t miss a lot. Like nothing. You never have an easy point. It’s always a long rally.”

Before arriving in Paris, Andreeva showed what she can do by eliminatin­g three players ranked in the Top 40 at the clay-court Madrid Open.

She was asked Thursday during a news conference filled with one-liners: What’s the secret to success at such a young age?

“Maybe, as my coach says, to not be like a diva. To stay humble all the time,” said Andreeva, whose older sister, Erika, lost in the first round at Roland Garros this week.

And then Andreeva demonstrat­ed what she meant by disputing the very premise of the question.

“I don’t think that I have a lot of success now,” she said, resting her cheek on her right hand. “I didn’t win any tournament­s. I just play.”

Alrighty, then.

Yes, Andreeva has lofty aims. Asked to define what her dreams are in her sport, she mentioned that Novak Djokovic has 22 Grand Slam titles.

“So I want to go,” Andreeva said, “until 25.”

Out of the mouths of babes, eh?

Andreeva is supposed to occupy herself with homework for her online courses — “Chemistry is so bad,” came the lament — and a reporter wanted to know how she spends her idle moment.

“I don’t have any hobbies. I think I’m like a usual teenager. I love to watch some TV series when I have free time,” Andreeva said, before offering one of a handful of punch lines over the course of her news conference: “I also have to do my school, but let’s be honest, I don’t do it sometimes.”

Her favorite tennis players amount to a three-way tie among Roger Federer (“He’s always been my No. 1”), Rafael Nadal (“I don’t know why, but in my head, everything turned” when Nadal won his 14th championsh­ip at Roland Garros last year) and Djokovic (“I don’t want to offend Novak”).

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