Gauff survives Siegemund test to advance at US Open
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[August 29, 2023]
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Sixth seed Coco Gauff survived a
surprisingly tough test from Laura Siegemund in a tense first-round
match at the U.S. Open on Monday, fighting back to beat the German
3-6 6-2 6-4.
The U.S. teenager and the home crowd were stunned when Siegemund,
the world number 121, used a variety of shotmaking and some
spectacular plays at the net to take the first set.
But Gauff hit back early in the second, ending a 26-minute opening
game with a break as Siegemund began to complain to the chair umpire
about the serve clock being started too quickly after points.
Gauff broke again for a 4-1 lead and levelled the match when her
backhand hit the net cord and threw off the timing of Siegemund's
volley.
The American 19-year-old took control in the third set, racing out
to a 3-0 lead and defusing Siegemund's net attack with some lovely
lobs.
Siegemund was handed a point penalty on game point to give Gauff a
5-1 lead, a decision she disagreed with, telling the umpire that
Gauff was playing "extremely fast" as boos rained down on her.
Siegemund refused to go away and broke to cut the lead to 5-3 with
the help of three double faults by Gauff.
But on her second chance to serve out the match Gauff did not miss,
letting out a scream and pumping her fist after Siegemund's backhand
landed in the net to end the nearly three hour match.
"Slow," Gauff said when asked to describe the contest, raising
laughter from the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd.
"It was a tough match, I wasn't playing my best tennis. Laura, she's
not an easy opponent. She fights to the end and that's what she did
today.
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Tennis - U.S. Open - Flushing Meadows,
New York, United States - August 28, 2023 Coco Gauff of the U.S.
celebrates after winning her first round match against Germany's
Laura Siegemund REUTERS/Mike Segar
"I was able to overcome a lot of adversity so I'm
happy with how I managed to get through."
Gauff, who is coming off a North American summer hard court swing
where she won titles in Washington D.C. and Cincinnati, said she had
to step up her intensity after dropping the first set.
"I was trying to be more aggressive," she said.
"She was coming to the net a lot so I was trying to take that away
from her. I think I lost the majority of the points where she came
to net.
"She slices a lot so it's tough to be as aggressive as you normally
would but I was able to get through."
Next up for Gauff is 16-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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