Gauff sets up decider with Zheng at WTA Finals
World number three Coco Gauff and number seven Zheng Qinwen will square off in the championship match of the WTA Finals in Riyadh after claiming impressive victories in the semis on Friday.
The 20-year-old Gauff knocked out world number one Aryna Sabalenka 7-6(7/4), 6-3 to become the youngest player to reach the final at the season-ending championships since Caroline Wozniacki in 2010.
Zheng, a gold medallist in singles at the Olympic Games this year, reached the final on her debut appearance at the season-ending showpiece with a 6-3, 7-5 victory over Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova.
A NEW champion will be crowned in Riyadh! 👑🏆
— wta (@WTA) November 8, 2024
Who will take home the title? ⬇️#WTAFinalsRiyadh pic.twitter.com/NcTSvNdGH6
Gauff improved to 5-4 head-to-head against Sabalenka, and was the more stable player in their semifinal, as she saved nine of 13 break points throughout the match.
"I'm happy with the way I played. I know against Aryna, she's always going to be a tough match. She's world number one for a reason," the 2023 US Open champion said.
Gauff beat Zheng in their sole previous meeting, on clay in Rome earlier this season, and the American used to be coached by Pere Riba, who currently works with the Chinese player.
"She's playing great tennis," Gauff said of Zheng.
"Just playing confident tennis will help me and give me the best shot at winning. I'm not really nervous. Year-end to me has always been a bonus and being here is already a privilege."
With a combined age of 42 years and 271 days, the match-up between Zheng and Gauff on Saturday will feature the youngest combined age for the two finalists at the event since Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams in 2004.
In front of a buoyant crowd at King Saud University Indoor Arena, Sabalenka was under pressure in her first service game, needing eight-and-a-half minutes to hold for 1-all, after saving two break points.
Four forehand errors from Gauff cost her the next game as Sabalenka broke for a 2-1 advantage but the Belarusian's lead was short-lived, as she immediately got broken at love.
The pair were neck and neck until Sabalenka broke through in game 11, drawing the error from Gauff to give herself a chance to serve for the opening set.
A clever short ball from Gauff resulted in a Sabalenka mistake and the set fittingly went to a tiebreak.
The American raced to a 6-1 lead in the breaker and finally clinched the 59-minute set on her fourth opportunity.
'FEELS SO SPECIAL'
The second set was a different story, with Gauff taking the helm and breaking twice to build a 4-1 gap.
In a marathon sixth game, Sabalenka needed eight break points to get one of the breaks back but her effort was nullified by Gauff, who took four points in a row on her opponent's serve to surge ahead 5-2.
The Floridian couldn't serve out the win but kept up the pressure on Sabalenka's serve to reach the final after one hour and 49 minutes of sheer battle.
What dreams are made of 💫@CocoGauff secures her spot in the final at the WTA Finals for the very first time in her career! #WTAFinalsRiyadh pic.twitter.com/4R67BYU8b8
— wta (@WTA) November 8, 2024
Olympic gold medallist Zheng, making her WTA Finals debut, got off to a great start against the Czech eight seed, with an early break of serve to take a 3-0 lead.
Krejcikova managed to save three set points at 5-2 down, but Zheng went on to win the next game to love and take the first set with ease.
The second set looked to be going the same way, as again Zheng raced into a 3-0 lead, this time with two breaks of serve, but Krejcikova finally got into her groove, winning the next four games with two breaks of her own.
The next three games went with serve to leave the pair tied at 5-5 before Zheng managed to break again leaving her to serve for the match. Krejcikova held firm, saving the first match point, but Zheng finally got the job done.
MESMERI-ZHENG 🤩
— wta (@WTA) November 8, 2024
Zheng Qinwen is into her first #WTAFinalsRiyadh final as she defeats Krejcikova in straight sets! pic.twitter.com/sTWCtFFr5k
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