
Aryna Sabalenka left inconsolable after ‘terrible' French Open loss to Gauff, chokes up during presentation speech
Aryna Sabalenka could barely speak, her face buried in her palms as she held the mic. And as she uttered her first words, tears rolled down her cheeks. It was a tough moment for the world No. 1, who had held the edge after winning the opening set of the French Open final. But her power game was eventually neutralised by Coco Gauff, who turned the tide to clinch her maiden Roland Garros crown.
Sabalenka showed her mental steel in a pulsating 78-minute opening set, roaring to a 4-1 lead with a double break. Even as Gauff clawed her way back to force a tie-break, the Belarusian held her nerve to edge ahead in the shootout and take a one-set lead in the final.
However, a staggering 70 unforced errors eventually cost her the match. Gauff stormed through the second set in just 32 minutes with a double break, then sealed victory with a late break in the decider to claim her second career Slam title.
"This will hurt so much, especially after such a tough two seeks playing great tennis in terrible conditions," the Belarusian said as she stifled her sobs.
"Thank you my team for the support, I'm sorry for this terrible final. As always I will come back stronger," the three-time Grand Slam champion said.
'To Coco: you deserve it, you're a hard worker, a fighter.'

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In an engrossing championship clash between the top two players, No. 2 seed Coco Gauff pulled off a three-set comeback against World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka to win her first French singles title and second Grand Slam singles title on Saturday. After narrowly losing a mesmerizing, back-and-forth first set, Gauff rebounded spectacularly to register 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-4 win over Sabalenka after 2 hours and 38 minutes. Three years after her runner-up showing at 2022 Roland Garros, Gauff now adds the French Open crown to her 2023 US Open title. "I honestly didn't think I could do it," said Gauff said during the trophy presentation. Notably, Gauff is the first American in a decade to triumph in Paris, since Serena Williams won her third French Open title in 2015. At 21 years old, Gauff also became the youngest American to win the Roland Garros title since Serena Williams' first French Open title in 2002. Meanwhile Sabalenka nearly became the only active woman to have won singles titles at three of the four Grand Slam events, but she was outfoxed by Gauff. Gauff had seven fewer winners than Sabalenka in the final -- but 40 fewer unforced errors. "This hurts so much. Congratulations to Coco - she was a better player than me," said Sabalenka. After picking up 2,000 points for winning her second Slam title, Gauff will rise from No. 5 to No. 2 in the Race to the WTA Finals Riyadh. She will also maintain her career-high World No. 2 spot in the PIF WTA Rankings. On the other hand, Sabalenka falls to 3-3 in Grand Slam finals, but she will still remain No. 1 in both the WTA Rankings and the Race to the WTA Finals Riyadh by large margins.