logo
Opinion: Coco Gauff doesn't dominate tennis, and that's OK. She's still rare.

Opinion: Coco Gauff doesn't dominate tennis, and that's OK. She's still rare.

USA Today6 days ago

Opinion: Coco Gauff doesn't dominate tennis, and that's OK. She's still rare.
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Aryna Sabalenka set to play Coco Gauff in 2025 French Open Women's Singles Final
World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka beat four-time champion Iga Swiatek to set up a French Open final against No. 2 seed Coco Gauff.
Sports Pulse
It's time for American sports fans – even American tennis fans – to stop taking Coco Gauff for granted.
On some level, that's a crazy sentence to write. For two straight years, she has been the highest-paid women's athlete in the world, earning $21 million in endorsements alone in 2024, according to Sportico, even though she's never been ranked No. 1 in the world. Nor has she ever been viewed like Caitlin Clark as a singular breakthrough figure taking her sport to new heights.
You could even argue Gauff has been a bit overvalued relative to her lone Grand Slam title at the 2023 US Open. If the theory behind Gauff's marketability and potential to transcend her sport in American culture was that she could succeed the throne of Serena Williams, it's a bet that has not – and may never – come close to paying off.
And yet, shouldn't it be a bigger deal that she's going to play in yet another Grand Slam final on Saturday, trying to win the French Open at just 21 years old?
The problem with being The Chosen One in sports is that there's rarely much of a payoff that exceeds the intoxication of possibility. LeBron James and Tiger Woods may be the only two American athletes in history who have ever truly conquered the bar that was set for them as teenage prodigies.
When Gauff burst into the public eye in 2019, beating Venus Williams at Wimbledon as a 15-year-old, she was forced to carry that burden – even if she wasn't really old enough at the time to fully understand what it would mean, and the rest of us didn't fully appreciate how hard it would be to fulfill even a fraction of it.
The truth is, someone like Serena Williams is a once-in-a-lifetime figure. Gauff is just a great but flawed athlete who happens to be a really cool person.
Collectively, we all need to do a better job making sure that's enough.
And that goes for Gauff's hardcore fans, too.
If you ever dare to peruse the tennis-loving corner of social media during any of Gauff's matches, the general vibe among her supporters is often one of disgust that she isn't routinely dominating players who aren't perceived to be as talented as her. She's not this, she's not that, she's gotta fix that forehand, what's wrong with her serve, it's time for a new coach, how does her mother deal with the stress, etc., etc., etc.
MORE: French Open brackets Schedule, results from Roland Garros
Maybe that's just social media doing its thing, but I know it's real because I've felt that way too. I've written columns about it. Outside of that incredible run in the summer of 2023 when she truly reached the peak of her powers, watching her navigate match after match has often felt more difficult than you think it should be.
And yet, when you look up, here's the résumé pending Saturday's final at Roland Garros against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka:
1 Grand Slam title
3 Grand Slam finals and two more semifinals
1 WTA year-end championship
2 WTA 1000-level titles and 9 WTA titles overall
A solid grip on the No. 2 ranking
Finals this year in Paris, Rome and Madrid, the three biggest tournaments of the year on clay.
If any other American athlete had accomplished this much at 21, every tournament they played would be an event. But Gauff does not get that privilege now and may never have it, even as well-liked and respected as she is, mostly because she is not going to be the best women's tennis player of all time.
And that's too bad because it's not only remarkable what she's done at such a young age, the way she's doing it is perhaps even more inspiring than most people understand.
The mistake we made with Gauff at the very beginning was the assumption that she possessed this generational ability to win Grand Slams because she was beating grown women when she was 15.
Now that Gauff has been around for so long, we need to accept a totally different construct for her career. Of course she's a very talented tennis player, but not in the same way as other prodigies like the Williams sisters, Jennifer Capriati and Martina Hingis, who did the technical things at a level far beyond their years.
Gauff is more of a great athlete than a dominant hitter of tennis balls, and the skill that truly stands out is her ability to beat the person on the other side of the net no matter how many double faults she hits (still way too many) or how easily she loses confidence in her forehand (almost a daily occurrence). In so many matches, even this year during the French Open, you will watch her struggle and struggle trying to figure it all out, play what seems to be sub-standard tennis and look like she's about to be dismissed from the tournament. But by the end, she somehow finds a way, most of the time, to play a little bit better than her opponent.
That's just who she is as a tennis player. It's also an incredible element of athletic talent that not too many of her peers possess. The fact Gauff doesn't make it look easy should not be a demerit. Instead, it should be the reason she sells out stadiums, causes TV ratings to spike when she plays and earns $20-plus million in endorsements.
Is that a harder bandwagon to sell a ticket for? Of course. American fans tend to reward dominance. It's just how we're wired.
It would be a mistake, however, to undervalue what Gauff has already done and how she's done it. She may not be a once-in-a-lifetime tennis player, but she is rare. And even if Gauff is not yet collecting big titles at the rate people might have once envisioned, the way she keeps putting herself in the mix despite very much being a work-in-progress is something we need to celebrate more than we have.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NFL, Genius Sports Extend and Expand Betting Data Partnership
NFL, Genius Sports Extend and Expand Betting Data Partnership

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NFL, Genius Sports Extend and Expand Betting Data Partnership

The NFL and Genius Sports reached a two-year extension for the London-based firm to continue as the exclusive distributor of real-time, official play-by-play and gambling data to sportsbooks and media companies around the world. The deal includes expanded rights for Genius to monetize NFL IP in two new ways. Genius can now sell ad inventory on the NFL BetVision streams, which are the streams of live games in the sportsbook apps. Genius Sports also gains the right to sell ads across the NFL's owned-and-operated digital empire, leveraging Genius' FanHub platform. The agreement includes further collaboration between Genius and the NFL on future activations with FanHub. Advertisement More from FanHub launched in the fall as an omnichannel marketing platform for brands to target sports fans. It allows advertisers the ability to make programmatic and social media placements. In Wednesday's announcement, Genius Sports CEO Mark Locke highlighted the expanded NFL deal as a key milestone for FanHub's rollout, which he believes will set a new standard in a data-driven experience for fans, broadcasters, sportsbooks and sponsors. Genius declined to comment on the financial terms of the partnership. The NFL and Genius first partnered in 2021 after a months-long bidding process, where Genius emerged ahead of rival and previous NFL partner Sportradar. In 2023, they reached an extension that ran through the 2027 NFL season. This deal aligns the two properties through the Super Bowl in February 2030. Advertisement Genius will remain the middleman between the NFL's official data feed and sportsbooks looking to build markets off the fastest possible in-game information. Genius also sells data to media companies—that's the 'Next Gen Stats' fans see on broadcasts—and serves as the exclusive gatekeeper to live game broadcasts that sportsbooks can purchase to show alongside their odds. The NFL is the dominant force in U.S. broadcasting, with 72 games in the top 100 TV broadcasts in 2024. The league is also dominant in U.S. sports betting, as the American Gaming Association projected American adults would bet $35 billion with legal sportsbooks during the 2024 season. Genius will continue to provide 'integrity services' across all NFL games. The NFL was granted 18.5 million Genius shares in the original 2021 deal and 4 million more shares for the 2023 extension. Genius' stock is up 76% over the last 12 months. Advertisement Genius Sports works with more than 700 sports organizations across leagues, sportsbooks, brands and broadcasters, including the EPL, NCAA, DraftKings, FanDuel, Coca-Cola, NBC and ESPN. Best of Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account
Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account

CNN

time23 minutes ago

  • CNN

Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account

Being the strong favorite to win a golf tournament isn't always an easy responsibility to bear. Just ask Scottie Scheffler, who has revealed that he was forced to close his Venmo account because of bettors staking money on his performance. Ahead of this week's US Open at Pennsylvania's Oakmont Country Club, for which Scheffler is the strong favorite, the world No. 1 explained how he often hears from fans who have a financial interest in where he finishes at tournaments. 'That's why I had to get rid of my Venmo because I was either getting paid by people or people requesting me a bunch of money when I didn't win,' he told reporters. 'It wasn't a good feeling.' Asked about the biggest sum he had ever been sent as a thank you, Scheffler added: 'I don't remember the most that somebody would send me. Maybe a couple bucks here or there. That didn't happen nearly as much as the requests did.' Scheffler has never won a US Open, but he enters the tournament with three wins in his last four appearances, which includes winning a third major title at the PGA Championship last month. After suffering a freak hand injury while cooking Christmas dinner and spending time away from the game to recover, Scheffler's recent results signal a clear return to form. He underlined his dominance with a four-shot victory at the Memorial Tournament in his last outing, joining Tiger Woods as the only back-to-back winners of the event. However, the 28-year-old said that he doesn't dwell on his status as a frequent pre-tournament favorite. 'Starting Thursday morning, we're at even par and it's up to me to go out there and play against the golf course and see what I can do,' said Scheffler. Oakmont Country Club, which is hosting the US Open for a record 10th time, is a daunting prospect for even the world's best golfers, with fast greens and thick, unforgiving rough. Low scores are not expected this week, and Scheffler went as far as to call it 'probably the hardest golf course that we'll play maybe ever.' He added: 'When you talk about strength and power, I think that becomes more of a factor in these tournaments because, when you hit it into the rough, you've got to muscle it out of there.' Scheffler, seeking his fourth title of the year, tees off at 1:25 p.m. ET on Thursday in a group with Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa.

Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account
Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account

CNN

time27 minutes ago

  • CNN

Scottie Scheffler admits that bettors forced him to delete his Venmo account

Being the strong favorite to win a golf tournament isn't always an easy responsibility to bear. Just ask Scottie Scheffler, who has revealed that he was forced to close his Venmo account because of bettors staking money on his performance. Ahead of this week's US Open at Pennsylvania's Oakmont Country Club, for which Scheffler is the strong favorite, the world No. 1 explained how he often hears from fans who have a financial interest in where he finishes at tournaments. 'That's why I had to get rid of my Venmo because I was either getting paid by people or people requesting me a bunch of money when I didn't win,' he told reporters. 'It wasn't a good feeling.' Asked about the biggest sum he had ever been sent as a thank you, Scheffler added: 'I don't remember the most that somebody would send me. Maybe a couple bucks here or there. That didn't happen nearly as much as the requests did.' Scheffler has never won a US Open, but he enters the tournament with three wins in his last four appearances, which includes winning a third major title at the PGA Championship last month. After suffering a freak hand injury while cooking Christmas dinner and spending time away from the game to recover, Scheffler's recent results signal a clear return to form. He underlined his dominance with a four-shot victory at the Memorial Tournament in his last outing, joining Tiger Woods as the only back-to-back winners of the event. However, the 28-year-old said that he doesn't dwell on his status as a frequent pre-tournament favorite. 'Starting Thursday morning, we're at even par and it's up to me to go out there and play against the golf course and see what I can do,' said Scheffler. Oakmont Country Club, which is hosting the US Open for a record 10th time, is a daunting prospect for even the world's best golfers, with fast greens and thick, unforgiving rough. Low scores are not expected this week, and Scheffler went as far as to call it 'probably the hardest golf course that we'll play maybe ever.' He added: 'When you talk about strength and power, I think that becomes more of a factor in these tournaments because, when you hit it into the rough, you've got to muscle it out of there.' Scheffler, seeking his fourth title of the year, tees off at 1:25 p.m. ET on Thursday in a group with Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store