
Coco Gauff claims first French Open title after fightback floors Aryna Sabalenka
In her half-decade competing at the highest level of her sport, Coco Gauff has built an impermeable reputation for her toughness. No matter the significance of the occasion or the state of her strokes, she will fight with everything at her disposal until the very last point. More often than not, she will find a way through.
Across the net from the best player in the world in one of the most important moments of her career, Gauff showed the full breadth of her grit and durability as she somehow plotted a path to victory, holding her own in a gripping match between the two best players in the world to topple Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1, 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-4 and win her first French Open title.
Two years after also defeating Sabalenka in three sets to win her first major title at the 2023 US Open, Gauff, the world No 2, has joined a distinguished group of players as a multiple grand slam champion. She is the first American player to win the French Open title since Serena Williams in 2015 and the youngest to do so since Williams in 2002.
After Sabalenka spectacularly ended Iga Swiatek's historic 26-match winning streak in the semi-finals, the top two seeds converged in the final. The rivalry between Gauff and Sabalenka has its own storied history. The pair have already played numerous dramatic three-set matches, including that unforgettable tussle in New York, when Sabalenka lost control of her emotions and Gauff produced a fearless performance to make her pay. Gauff now leads their head-to-head 6-5.
This time, Sabalenka opened the match in wonderful form and she established a 4-1 lead before falling apart. Throughout the first set, she struggled badly with the wind, her emotions and her rapidly rising unforced error count. With Sabalenka's groundstrokes in disarray, a tenacious Gauff chased down every ball and gave nothing away. Despite Sabalenka twice serving for the set, they converged in a tie-break, where Gauff forced herself inside the baseline and established a 5-3 lead. With the set hanging by a thread, Sabalenka completely locked in. She struck two supreme backhand winners to level the tie-break at 5-5. She then showed the growing variation in her game by closing out the set with a perfectly measured drop shot followed by a sweet drop volley.
FRENCH OPEN: Coco Gauff celebrates after winning the final match of the French Tennis Open at the Roland-Garros against Aryna Sabalenka. Pic: AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson
With the first set painstakingly secured, it seemed likely that Sabalenka would relax and play more freely until the end. It seemed likely that she would win. Instead, the emotional energy she used up seemed to leave its mark. While the Belarusian started the second set completely flat, Gauff rose to the occasion. In stark contrast to Sabalenka's visible anguish and glee after every pont, Gauff conducted herself as she always does. She remained positive, cheering on her successful points while betraying minimal emotion when she faltered. She focused intently on chasing down every ball, extending every point and looking for opportunities to impose herself. She approached every point with unflinching discipline.
For the first set of the match, as she tried to neutralise Sabalenka's offensive barrage, Gauff had to chase down as many balls as possible and draw errors from her opponent with her defence. Towards the end of the set, though, she was gradually able to impose herself. As Sabalenka completely lost her way in set two, Gauff went on the front foot with her backhand and smothered Sabalenka's second serve. Her forehand, once the bane of her existence, held up brilliantly, its heavy topspin kicking up out of Sabalenka's strike zone. Most importantly, she continued to hold her nerve.
After breezing through the second set, Gauff took a 3-1 lead and held a break point on Sabalenka's serve. Despite how badly she had struggled for most of the set, Sabalenka lasered a down-the-line backhand winner on break point and levelled the set at 3-3. Even with the best player in the world breathing down her neck until the bitter end, Gauff showed her toughness in the tightest moments as she immediately re-established her break and then held on in a breathless final service game to close out the best win of her career.
Guardian

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Journal
4 hours ago
- The Journal
Coco Gauff fights back to beat Sabalenka to French Open crown
The 42 COCO GAUFF BATTLED back from a set down to beat world number one Aryna Sabalenka in a Grand Slam final for the second time with a dramatic victory in the French Open showpiece on Saturday. The second-ranked American dug deep to claim a 6-7 (5/7), 6-2, 6-4 victory and her second major title after also defeating Sabalenka at the 2023 US Open. The 21-year-old more than made amends for her emotional 2022 final loss to Iga Swiatek at Roland Garros, outlasting Sabalenka over two hours and 38 minutes on Court Philippe Chatrier. It was a second straight Grand Slam final loss for Sabalenka after her defeat by Madison Keys at the Australian Open in January. Advertisement Gauff was rock solid after falling a set down, while Sabalenka made 70 unforced errors in windy conditions in a match which followed a very similar pattern to Gauff's victory at Flushing Meadows two years ago. Belarusian Sabalenka was aiming to become the only current women's player to win three of the four Grand Slam events after her US Open triumph last year and back-to-back Australian Open titles in 2023 and 2024. But Gauff instead moved 6-5 ahead in their head-to-head record, proving the more consistent player in the first women's Slam final between the world's top two since Caroline Wozniacki beat Simona Halep in Melbourne in 2018. – © AFP 2025 Written by AFP and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .

The 42
5 hours ago
- The 42
Coco Gauff fights back to beat Sabalenka to French Open crown
COCO GAUFF BATTLED back from a set down to beat world number one Aryna Sabalenka in a Grand Slam final for the second time with a dramatic victory in the French Open showpiece on Saturday. The second-ranked American dug deep to claim a 6-7 (5/7), 6-2, 6-4 victory and her second major title after also defeating Sabalenka at the 2023 US Open. Advertisement The 21-year-old more than made amends for her emotional 2022 final loss to Iga Swiatek at Roland Garros, outlasting Sabalenka over two hours and 38 minutes on Court Philippe Chatrier. It was a second straight Grand Slam final loss for Sabalenka after her defeat by Madison Keys at the Australian Open in January. Gauff was rock solid after falling a set down, while Sabalenka made 70 unforced errors in windy conditions in a match which followed a very similar pattern to Gauff's victory at Flushing Meadows two years ago. Belarusian Sabalenka was aiming to become the only current women's player to win three of the four Grand Slam events after her US Open triumph last year and back-to-back Australian Open titles in 2023 and 2024. But Gauff instead moved 6-5 ahead in their head-to-head record, proving the more consistent player in the first women's Slam final between the world's top two since Caroline Wozniacki beat Simona Halep in Melbourne in 2018. More to follow. – © AFP 2025


The Irish Sun
5 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Coco Gauff becomes first US French Open champion since Serena Williams with stunning comeback win over Aryna Sabalenka
COCO GAUFF became the first American singles winner of the French Open since Serena Williams as she overpowered fuming Aryna Sabalenka in Paris. For the first time in a decade, the Roland Garros women's crown will be in United States hands as Gauff came from a set behind on Court Philippe-Chatrier. Advertisement 10 Coco Gauff became the first American for ten years to win the French Open Credit: AP 10 She beat Aryna Sabalenka in three sets at Roland Garros Credit: AFP 10 Gauff got her hands on the trophy - and sealed it with a kiss Credit: AFP 10 Sabalenka broke down in tears during her runner-up speech Credit: AP Under an open roof, in a final that pitted the No1 versus the No2 seed, the 21-year-old won 6-7 6-2 6-4 after more than two-and-a-half hours, with Manchester United legend Eric Cantona watching from the front-row seats. Gauff, who lost to Iga Swiatek in the 2022 final, fell to the floor when it was all over and started to cry, mouthing: "Oh my God, oh my God." This is Gauff's second major championship win, the last one coming It was tense and suspenseful but not the best quality final. Advertisement That will matter little for the Yanks as Gauff took possession of the trophy on the biggest clay-court arena in the world. Tenacious Sabalenka, who has a tiger tattoo on her left forearm, managed to come from 4-1 down in the first-set tie break to move 1-0 up after 80 minutes of intense play. It was the first time the opening set of the women's singles final in the French capital had been decided at the tie-break since 1998 when Arantxa Sanchez Vicario faced Monica Seles. Yet world No2 Gauff won 12 of the next 18 games, banking the £2.1million top prize on her second match point in slightly bizarre fasion. Advertisement Most read in Tennis Exclusive Her forehand looked for all the world to be heading long but bounced on the line as Sabalenka had to readjust to keep the rally going but on her next shot pushed a backhand wide of the tramline as Gauff collapsed on to the clay in delight. The Florida-born star is the first American to win the Roland Garros singles title since Williams in 2015. Behind-the-scenes US Open footage shows furious Aryna Sabalenka repeatedly smashing racket after crushing final loss And she is also the youngest American conqueror since the retired 23-time Grand Slam champion was successful in 2002 aged 20. World No1 Sabalenka, as she often does, cut a frustrated figure as things went against her, screaming out obscenities to her box, and failing to find any inspiration to stop the tie turning in her opponent's favour. Advertisement Gauff hugged film director Spike Lee before going up to her players' box to celebrate with her family. Handed the trophy by Belgium's four-time French Open champion Justine Henin, Gauff said: 'I'd like to thank God. I went through a lot of things when I lost this final three years ago. 'I'm happy to be here. It means a lot to win this. Aryna, you are a fighter. 'I know that sometimes I am not the easiest person and I can be so serious but my team reminds me there is more to life. And that plays me better on court. Advertisement 'Thanks also to my parents. Keeping me grounded and giving me the belief that I can do this.' Sabalenka could not bear to watch the highlights of the contest that was replayed on the TV screens and covered her face with a towel in her seat. When she spoke to the crowd, she broke down in tears, before saying: 'This hurts so much. 'Especially after such a tough two weeks, playing great tennis and then in these different conditions, we showed terrible tennis in the final – that really hurts. Advertisement Read more on the Irish Sun 'Coco congrats. In these tough conditions, you were a better player than me. Well deserved. You are a fighter and a hard worker. 'Thank you my team for your support. I am sorry for this terrible final. As always, I will come back stronger." 10 Gauff managed to edge the victory in tricky, windy conditions Credit: Getty 10 Sabalenka's frustrations were clear to see Credit: Getty Advertisement 10 Eric Cantona was on the front row inside Court Philippe-Chatrier Credit: Getty 10 Gauff collapsed out on the clay in celebration Credit: Getty 10 Her roar at the end was full of sheer joy and delight Credit: Reuters 10 Gauff immediately went to celebrate with mum Candi and dad Corey Credit: Reuters Advertisement