World No. 2 Coco Gauff bested No. 8 Madison Keys in a hard-fought three-setter on Wednesday to clinch a berth in the 2025 French Open semifinal.
The All-American quarterfinal began with Gauff committing 11 unforced errors in the first five games, falling to a 4-1 deficit in the first set. Gauff's early struggles were directly related to her lowering her racquet tension in anticipation of slower surface speed, after the Court Philippe-Chatrier roof was closed due to the chilly morning Paris weather.
Gauff made the necessary adjustments and won four straight games to lead 5-4 until Keys saved a set point and ultimately won the ensuing tiebreaker. At that point, it seemed like Keys, on an 11-game winning streak at majors dating back to her Australian Open victory, had the momentum on her side.
In the second set, it was Gauff's turn to take a 4-1 lead, only for Keys to rattle off three straight games to tie things up. Gauff would respond with arguably the shot of the match — an angled backhanded winner — to secure a key break. Thereafter, she seized the momentum, winning eight of the next nine games to close out Keys, 6-7, 6-4, 6-1, and advance to the final four at Roland-Garros.
Gauff, who reached her first French Open semifinal in 2022, is now the youngest American in the Open Era to win 25 matches at the clay-court major, and the youngest overall since Martina Hingis. Furthermore, she's the youngest American to reach back-to-back semifinals at Paris since Andrea Jaeger in 1982.
25 - Coco Gauff (21y 73d) is the youngest American in the Open Era to claim 25+ career Women's Singles match wins at Roland Garros, and the youngest overall Martina Hingis (19 years and 241 days) in 2000. Wow.#RolandGarros | @rolandgarros @WTA @WTA_insider pic.twitter.com/cKZOCceas9
— OptaAce (@OptaAce) June 4, 2025
21, 73 - Coco Gauff (21 years and 73 days) is the youngest American to reach back-to-back Women’s Singles semi-finals at Roland Garros since Andrea Jaeger (16 years and 354 days) in 1982. Comeback.#RolandGarros | @rolandgarros @WTA @WTA_insider pic.twitter.com/Oxbpd9R7P8
— OptaAce (@OptaAce) June 4, 2025
After the win, Gauff admitted that the early morning Paris weather (match started at 11:00 local time) threw her off guard.
"I changed [the racquet tension] at 4-1, and after that I had chances to win the first set," she said, via WTA. "It's difficult to find the tension and how you want to play. I thought with the roof closed it would play slower, which it did in some moments, but I felt it was quick too. Also, I was playing Madison, so I don't know if that was the reason why!"
Gauff will face either teenage prodigy Mirra Andreeva or Lois Boisson in Friday's semifinal. The American is eying her first major since her 2023 U.S. Open title. She had an underwhelming 2024 that saw her lose in the fourth round at both the U.S. Open and Wimbledon.
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