























Gauff begins her bid for a first Wimbledon title on Monday’s opening day at the All England Club. | Photo Credit: AFP
Gauff begins her bid for a first Wimbledon title on Monday’s opening day at the All England Club. | Photo Credit: AFP
World No. 7 Coco Gauff says she has yet to find her confidence on grass as she prepares for next week’s Wimbledon tournament.
The two-time Grand Slam champion is seeking her first deep run at the All England Club, with Wimbledon being the only major where she has not progressed beyond the fourth round in six appearances.
Her 2025 campaign ended in a shock first-round defeat to Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska, while she also exited early at the Berlin Open grass-court event this month, losing in the round of 16 to Paula Badosa.
“Yeah, we don’t have the best relationship,” Gauff said of the surface on Saturday.
“I always have, like, fond memories on the grass,” she told reporters. “I obviously had a couple of fourth rounds here. I definitely think that I have the ability to play on it. I think it’s more about the confidence.”
Gauff faces a tricky path again this year, opening against world No. 79 Tamara Korpatsch, with a potential route that could see her meet fourth seed Jessica Pegula and top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in the later rounds.
“Also, I’m not going to lie, I haven’t had the best draws here at Wimbledon,” the 22-year-old American said.
“I think that’s also been tough. Yeah, something that I’m learning to play on. I don’t think it’s a natural surface for me but we’re going to make it natural.”
ALSO READ: Mohamed Salah injury update: Coach confirms Egypt star injured his left knee during draw vs Iran
Gauff defended the prize-money protests led by players, despite Wimbledon announcing a record 20 per cent increase in its total purse this year, saying the rise still fell short of expectations.
“I think people have to remember there are a lot of players below the rankings who are very good, top 100, top 200 in the world of their sport,” Gauff said.
“They come back from injury and are not necessarily getting that support. Also we ask some of the Slams to participate in the welfare programmes that we want just to help the quality of our sport as a whole.
“I definitely think the increase is good but it’s quite not where we would like it to be. That’s why my stance has still kind of been the same.”
Published on Jun 27, 2026
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。