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Iga Swiatek v Coco Gauff: French Open women’s singles semi-final – live | French Open 2024

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Key events

Swiatek 6-2, 3-3 Gauff*

At 15-all on Swiatek’s serve, Swiatek strikes a cross-court forehand winner. She liked that, she did. A rare show of emotion from someone who’s usually so calm on court. That shows how much she’s being tested by Gauff here. Swiatek is left stranded at the net on game point, 40-15, as Gauff threads a winner down the line. 40-30. Game, when Swiatek jams the serve into Gauff’s body and Gauff can only ram into the net.

Swiatek breaks back: Swiatek* 6-2, 2-3 Gauff

Gauff is fist pumping. Her box are on their feet. But they’re celebrating a little too soon, because Swiatek has the chance for an immediate break back at 30-40. Gauff misses with her first serve, lands the second, but her forehand then clips the tape and loops into the tramlines.

Gauff breaks: Swiatek 6-2, 1-3 Gauff*

Controversy at 0-15 on Swiatek’s serve. The umpire overrules a serve in and then gives the Pole the point, even though the call seemed to come while Gauff was hitting the return.

“I didn’t even finish my follow through, I have the right to finish my swing,” Gauff says to the umpire. “He called it before I hit it. The fans are booing because they know you’re wrong. I have to right to finish my swing.”

I think she’s right here. They should play a let. Gauff is in tears. But maybe this will give Gauff the fire she needs. 15-30. Gauff then biffs a backhand long and wipes away another tear. 30-all. But here’s a break point! 30-40. Swiatek smacks her forehand one way and then the other. Deuce. Advantage Swiatek. Deuce. Advantage Gauff. An absorbing rally ensues, the pair are really testing each other here, and Gauff gets it with a forehand that Swiatek can’t direct back into play!

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Swiatek* 6-2, 1-2 Gauff

At 30-all, a good serve from Gauff and there’s a “C’MON”. Gauff’s serve has to be swinging here for the American to stand any chance. And Gauff grabs the game with a classic one-two punch.

Swiatek 6-2, 1-1 Gauff*

Another thing that Gauff has going for her is her mentality – her forehand may be fragile but her strong mind helps make up for it. She won’t be affected by losing the first set – as she showed when she came from a set down against Ons Jabeur in the quarter-final. Gauff’s found a way this year to scrap and grind out wins when not at her best – winning ugly, as her coach Brad Gilbert would say. But Swiatek just isn’t missing here. She’s hit only 7 unforced errors to Gauff’s 25. And she holds here to 15.

Swiatek* 6-2, 0-1 Gauff

Gauff has now lost 22 of the 24 sets she has played against Swiatek. Is there anything she can hold on to going into this second set? Well, her backhand has been firing, but I just can’t see how – with her vulnerable forehand – she can get past the defending champion. It’s a bad match-up for her – like Stefanos Tsitsipas against Carlos Alcaraz on Tuesday. Credit to Gauff here – she decides to change tack with a winning drop shot against a stumbling Swiatek. It’s not often the Pole’s made to look like a slouch. Deuce. Advantage Gauff. Deuce. A vital hold for Gauff, surely. Advantage Gauff. Game. She has something to build on here, at least.

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Swiatek wins the first set 6-2!

Gauff will at least be buoyed by the fact she’s had a couple of break points in this set. But a 16th unforced error of the day and Swiatek takes the first point on her serve. 15-0. 15-all. The match started in cloud but sun is now bathing the court. And the sun is most certainly shining on Swiatek, as she glides to 30-15 and then 40-15 after another wobbly forehand from Gauff. Two set points. And Gauff gifts it to her as the American’s forehand flumps into the net.

Work to do for Coco Gauff in the second set. Photograph: Yoan Valat/EPA
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Swiatek* 5-2 Gauff

Gauff does at least rally here, getting to 40-15 despite a wonderful crouching shot from Swiatek, and the American seals the game by smacking down the smash. That’ll have felt good. Hopefully it’s got rid of a bit of frustration, too, because she’s now got to find a way to break Swiatek if this set is to go on for more than one more game.

Swiatek 5-1 Gauff*

Swiatek is such a formidable frontrunner, this is surely a must-win game for Gauff to stay in the set. A brilliant duel at 15-0, 19 shots, the longest rally of the match so far, and it’s Swiatek who takes it! 30-0. 40-0. Game. The clay is turning into quicksand for Gauff now. After an encouraging start Gauff is being suffocated here and must hold serve to stay in the set.

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Swiatek breaks: Swiatek* 4-1 Gauff

Despite the scoreline, Gauff has made Swiatek work hard here, certainly much harder than the world No 1 has had to do since that second-round escape against Osaka. The problem for Gauff is that in order to push the Pole she’s going for her shots, but is making a few too many errors. Another errant shot and then a double fault. 15-40, two break points. Another backhand winner for the highlights reel for Gauff. 30-40. But a 13th unforced error and there’s the double break.

Swiatek 3-1 Gauff*

Swiatek has lost only once on clay this season, having won back-to-back titles in Madrid and Rome before heading to the French Open, where she’s won the title the past two years and is on a 19-match winning streak.

Swiatek serves to Gauff’s forehand on the first point here – a smart tactic to target that side – but Swiatek then decides to mix it up, serving to Gauff’s backhand, and Gauff dismisses it for a winner. Best stick to the forehand, Iga. After sliding break point down, at 30-40, Swiatek does exactly that, Gauff gets it back but then makes a disappointing error. Deuce. Advantage Swiatek. Deuce, when Gauff’s power finally beats Swiatek’s supreme reactions at the net! Advantage Swiatek. Deuce, after a Gauff lob that just lands in! Gauff hits an ugly return that almost rockets into the stands it was so wild, and Swiatek holds.

Photograph: Stéphanie Lecocq/Reuters
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Swiatek* 2-1 Gauff

That previous game encapsulated the problem that Gauff faces this afternoon: she worked so hard to get into a game-winning position, but Swiatek is such a formidable player on the big points and gives away so few errors. A strong serve at 15-0 gives Gauff a cheap point for 30-0. She needs plenty more of those this afternoon. 40-0, as Swiatek sprays a rare errant forehand wide. 40-15, as Swiatek steps into the forecourt and puts away the winner. Is there a better mover than her in the women’s game? I don’t think so. But Gauff holds to 15.

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Swiatek 2-0 Gauff*

Naomi Osaka came within a point of beating Swiatek in the second round, but the difference between that match and this one is that Gauff doesn’t hit the ball quite as hard as Osaka.

Gauff does have plenty of punch on her backhand though, and drives one down the line for 15-all. A few more penetrating backhands from Gauff on the next point, she works the point well, coming into the net, but Swiatek’s ball dips dangerously into the clay and Gauff can’t get it back. 30-15. 40-15. Another backhand winner from Gauff, wow. 40-30. If only Gauff’s forehand was as good as her backhand she’d be unbeatable. Make that a third backhand winner. Deuce. Advantage Gauff, break-back point. But an untimely first backhand error from Gauff and they’re back at deuce … and from there Swiatek survives.

Swiatek breaks: Swiatek* 1-0 Gauff

Chris Evert is saying on the Eurosport commentary that she thinks the key for Gauff today is her serve. She’s hit twice as many double faults as aces this year, and given that Swiatek is the best returner on the tour, if not the best, Gauff needs to have a high first-serve percentage. Swiatek will keep puncturing holes in Gauff’s serve if it’s not aggressive enough.

To highlight this, Swiatek immediately sprints to 0-30 on Gauff’s serve. Gauff recovers to 15-30, and the point of the game then plays out, which Swiatek takes with a bruising backhand down the line. 15-40, two break points. And Gauff gets her drive volley all wrong and Swiatek strikes from the off!

All 10 of Gauff’s defeats by Swiatek have been in straight sets, including the 2022 final at Roland Garros and in last year’s quarter-finals. What’s hard for the 20-year-old in this match-up is that for all of her strengths – her backhand, her athleticism, her mentality – she’s got an iffy forehand that Swiatek can target with her own forehand, which is so powerful and top-spin heavy.

And here come the players, headphones on, as they always are. Which is a shame because they probably don’t fully hear the loud reception they get from the crowd. But it’s good to see that the stands are nearly full. The Parisian patrons have been a bit tardy so far this fortnight, but they don’t want to be late for this one.

Gauff on the mental challenge of facing Swiatek:

I think you just get older and learn how to handle the pressures a little bit more. I don’t have a mental coach or anything like that sports-related, but it is something that I knew I had to improve and just be more positive … and realising that I can’t beat myself and also my opponent beating me.

She’s definitely a tough opponent for me and for anybody. I think for me I just have to go back and watch [previous matches] and try to find what I have to do.

I think she’s playing great tennis here, so it’s going to be a challenge, but I’m going to go into the match with a lot of belief that I can.

Swiatek on why she’s not taking Gauff lightly despite beating her in 10 of their 11 meetings:

I think her mental game is a little bit better, and before it was kind of easier to ‘crack her’, I would say, when you were leading.

But it’s normal that she’s making progress. She’s at that age that everything goes pretty nicely that if you’re working hard, then you will get progress.

Probably every aspect of her game is a little bit better, because, yeah, it’s different being a teenager on the tour and then being a more mature player.

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One match has already been completed on Philippe Chatrier today, with Britain’s Neal Skupski and his American partner Desirae Krawczyk losing the mixed doubles final, 6-4, 7-5 to Laura Siegemund and Edouard Roger-Vasselin.

Elsewhere, another Briton, Alfie Hewett, has been knocked out in the men’s singles wheelchair semi-finals. The top seed was defeated 7-5, 6-7 (1), 6-2 by the Argentinian Gustavo Fernandez.

Another trip down memory lane:

Or you’ve got nearly enough time to watch this. YouTube comes up short on the “Henin 2007 final” search, but here’s Seles beating Steffi Graf in the 1992 final:

Fancy some reading while we wait?

Order of play

COURT PHILIPPE CHATRIER

3pm/2pm BST
(1) Iga Swiatek (Poland) v (3) Coco Gauff (US)
Not before 5pm/4pm BST
(12) Jasmine Paolini (Italy) v Mirra Andreeva (Russia)

Preamble

Tennis, bloody hell. Only eight days ago Iga Swiatek was down and very nearly out against an inspired Naomi Osaka in the second round, coming from 5-2 behind in the final set and saving a match point to keep her bid for a third consecutive French Open title alive.

But instead of that narrow escape putting any doubt in the world No 1’s mind, it has had the opposite effect. She has treated her opponents with utter disdain since, conceding only eight games in three matches (half of those six sets have been won 6-0), and she made Marketa Vondrousova look like a world No 500 rather than a reigning Wimbledon champion in the 6-0, 6-2 quarter-final rout.

Yesterday’s results gave her even more momentum when her toughest rivals on tour, Aryna Sabalenka and Elena Rybakina, were bundled out in the other half of the draw. Swiatek knows that if she gets past Coco Gauff in their semi-final today – and the chances are that she will given this is a profitable match-up for her, having beaten the American in 10 of their 11 meetings – she’ll be the overwhelming favourite in Saturday’s final against Mirra Andreeva or Jasmine Paolini.

But making this all about Swiatek would do a disservice to Gauff – and Andreeva and Paolini. There has been so much to like about Gauff this tournament, especially the way she dealt with a resurgent Ons Jabeur in her gutsy three-set comeback win on Tuesday. Gauff – still only 20 – will be the new world No 2 next week, a reward for the supreme consistency she has achieved since winning the US Open last year. And Andreeva and Paolini deserve plenty of credit for the way they overcame their far more illustrious opponents yesterday; one of them will now reach their first slam final.

Swiatek knows this title is now hers for the taking, which would make her only the third woman to win three successive Roland Garros titles in the Open era after Monica Seles in 1990-92 and Justine Henin in 2005-07. But yesterday’s shockwaves are still reverberating around Roland Garros, and they serve as a reminder that nothing is guaranteed. And that, of course, is why we watch.

Play begins at: 2pm BST/3pm Paris time. Don’t be late!





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