London: American teenager Cori Coco Gauff knocked off compatriot Venus Williams 6-4 6-4 in the first round at Wimbledon. "She said congratulations. I told her thank you for everything that you did. I wouldn't be here without you. I always wanted to tell her that," the 15-year-old Gauff said after the match on Monday. The world number 301, the youngest player ever to qualify for Wimbledon in the Open Era, took out a player who is 24 years her senior, setting a record for the match with the biggest age difference between opponents at the grass-court event. "Honestly I don't really know how to feel. That's the first time I have ever cried after winning a match. I don't even know how to explain how I feel," Gauff said. Williams, a five-time Wimbledon champion, appeared to be getting back into the match at 4-4 in the second set, but Gauff did not falter and continued to put the pressure on.
"I definitely had to tell myself to stay calm, I had to remind myself that the lines are the same lines, the courts are the same size and after every point I told myself stay calm," Gauff said.With this victory, Gauff, who had just 31 professional matches under her belt heading into Wimbledon, will move up to world No. 215 in the WTA rankings. Up next for Gauff is Slovak veteran Magdalena Rybarikova, who took out No.10 seed Aryna Sabalenka, of Belarus, 6-2, 6-4 earlier in the day.
When American high school student Cori Gauff began the 2019 season ranked 875 in the world, not many would have given her a second glance let alone predicted that six months later she would set Wimbledon alight. Not satisfied with pulling off one of the all-time shocks in Wimbledon history, Gauff, who is known as Coco, wasted little time in declaring her long-term goals. The youngest player in the singles draws certainly delivered an almighty knockout punch to floor Williams, who at 39 was the oldest woman in the Wimbledon women's singles draw.
- Indo-Asian News Service