
Gauff speeds past Alexandrova to book French Open last-eight spot
PARIS :Second seed Coco Gauff brushed aside Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-0 7-5 on Monday to move into the French Open quarter-finals and stay on course for her first title in Paris.
The American world number two must have thought she would have an easy morning session after powering through the first set in sensational fashion but the Russian bounced back in the second to test her opponent.
"The whole match I played well. She stepped up her game in the second set. Overall I thought I played great," Gauff said.
"I move well on clay, really comfortable with sliding and moving on the surface. The most physical surface for sure and I do well in that department."
Hunting her first French Open crown after reaching the final in 2022 and semi-finals last year, the 21-year-old started fast, earning three consecutive breaks for a 5-0 lead in 15 minutes.
Gauff was running her opponent ragged across the baseline, with the 30-year-old Alexandrova, bidding to reach her first Grand Slam quarter-final, earning a mere five points until that stage.
Gauff, who has now won four of their five meetings, gave away five break points in the next game but still secured her first bagel of the tournament before the Russian got on the scoreboard at the start of the second set with her first hold.
Unforced errors started creeping into Gauff's game as Alexandrova put up stronger resistance.
Gauff, the youngest American player to have reached at least the fourth round at seven consecutive Grand Slams since Venus Williams between 1997-1999, broke Alexandrova at 3-3.
But the Russian broke straight back and went 5-4 up, with Gauff clearly rattled and double-faulting twice before holding to level.
The second seed kept her composure, broke Alexandrova and wrapped up the match on her serve. She will next face the winner of the all-American fourth-round clash between Madison Keys and Hailey Baptiste.
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Straits Times
22 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Boisson should expect glare of media spotlight, says Gauff
Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - June 5, 2025 France's Lois Boisson in action during her semi final match against Coco Gauff of the U.S. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - June 5, 2025 Coco Gauff of the U.S. shakes hands with France's Lois Boisson after winning their semi final match REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq PARIS - Having experienced intense media scrutiny early in her career, Coco Gauff knows all too well the attention her French Open semi-final opponent, local favourite Lois Boisson, faces. Boisson, ranked 361st in the world, burst into the limelight at Roland Garros with an impressive run to the last four and while it ended in a 6-1 6-2 defeat on Thursday, the 22-year-old will shoot up the WTA rankings. "I think her position is especially harder because I think in the French (Open) there's not a lot of (local) players who have made this result in recent years. So I think the whole country is going to be looking at everything," Gauff told a press conference. No French female player had reached the French Open semi-final since Marion Bartoli in 2011. "I guess my biggest advice is just to stay true to yourself and keep your people around you, what they expect from you, not what media expects from you or other outside analysts expect for you," Gauff added. Boisson, however, appeared to have her feet firmly on the ground throughout her Paris stay. "I don't know her too well, but the fact that she's had such a great run and even with all the media attention that happened so fast, obviously I think she has her head on her right shoulders," the American world number two said. "It's going to be probably a weird few months for her, but I think the more it happens, the more you get used to it." Boisson is not planning to change much beyond her tournament schedule as with a new ranking of 65th she will surely get direct entry into the Grand Slam and top-event main draws. "Necessarily when we win more matches and we get into the top 100, then people take more of an interest in you. It's logical," she said. "But I don't have any particular pressure. I have a great team with me, and I'm going to keep my feet well on the ground and all will be well. "For the time being, I'm not going to make any particular changes because I think that if I'm here today it's because it works well, and I don't see why I would change much." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
23 minutes ago
- CNA
Boisson should expect glare of media spotlight, says Gauff
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Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Sabalenka downs holder Swiatek to set up French Open final with Gauff
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