Grand Slam Tennis Coaching US Open
Coco Gauff’s Serve Will Command Attention at the 2025 US Open
Coco Gauff’s serve will be the focus at the 2025 US Open after recurring double-fault issues…
Coco Gauff begins her main-draw campaign at the 2025 US Open under a microscope with serving form the central question. The 2023 champion has not played since a late-summer stretch marked by repeated double faults and a coaching change that brought biomechanic Gavin MacMillan onto her team.
“All eyes are going to be on the Gauff serve, and how does she approach the first serve,” former world No. 1 Lindsay Davenport said ahead of Gauff’s opening match against Ajla Tomljanovic. “There’s been years where she’s gotten up there and gone for really aggressive first serves. Then, this year, she’s kind of stepped back from that, maybe because she hasn’t wanted to hit a lot of second serves. The double faults were a problem this summer.”
Gauff was at the peak of her season in June when she defeated world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka to claim her second Grand Slam title at Roland Garros. Since leaving Europe she has struggled with a return of the serving yips, posting double-digit double faults at both the Omnium Banque Nationale and the Cincinnati Open, where she reached the fourth round and quarterfinals.
She was first seen on court with MacMillan during the US Open Fan Week, working on serve mechanics and her forehand. Just days before the tournament began, Gauff parted ways with coach Matt Daly and hired MacMillan, the coach credited with reworking Sabalenka’s serve in 2022 and paving the way for her 2023 major victory and rise to No. 1.
“For me, I just want to get better,” she said in her Media Day Press conference on Friday . “I’m obsessed with the process of getting better. Yeah, sometimes maybe it hurts because I get obsessed with it too much.
“I feel like I have a clear future where I see myself and I feel like I’m really close. I think this aspect of the game will bring everything together for me.”
Analysts point to Gauff’s athletic defense as a counterbalance to serving inconsistency. “The defense that she can bring, she can stay in any match regardless of how she’s serving,” said Rubin. “For a lot of players, the serve would have taken them completely out of some of these matches. They would not have been able to function. But Coco Gauff, she continues to be able to find ways to win.”
Jim Courier cautioned that the draw contains threats and will demand consistency if Gauff is to repeat as a major champion. “She’s no pushover,” he said. “[Donna] Vekic also can crack the ball. Noami Osaka could also be a challenge. Can she get past [Daria] Kasatkina? She’s clever, crafty. It’s never going to be easy to win a title like this. You’re always going to run into people who are feeling it as the tournament rolls on.”
Grand Slam Player News WTA
Sabalenka Clinches 2025 Year-End No. 1 After Dominant, Consistent Season
Sabalenka ends 2025 as year-end No. 1 after a season with four titles and relentless consistency. In
Aryna Sabalenka has secured the 2025 year-end WTA No. 1 ranking, regardless of her result at the WTA Finals in Riyadh. Having finished 2024 at No. 1 as well, she becomes the 13th woman in WTA rankings history to end consecutive seasons at the top.
Sabalenka’s 2025 campaign combined peak moments with relentless consistency. She captured four titles, including the fourth Grand Slam title of her career at the US Open. She also reached four additional finals, among them two major finals at the Australian Open and Roland Garros.
Her form across the season was remarkably steady. Sabalenka advanced to the quarterfinals or better at 13 of the 15 tournaments she played, a run that underpinned her hold on the top ranking from the opening week through the close of the year.
That uninterrupted stretch at No. 1 places her in an even smaller group. She is the seventh player in WTA rankings history to hold the No. 1 ranking for every week of a calendar year, and only the third woman to do so this century, after Serena Williams and Ashleigh Barty, who achieved the feat twice each.
The combination of Grand Slam success, four titles, multiple major finals and near-constant deep runs made Sabalenka the season’s defining player. Securing the year-end No. 1 spot for a second straight year confirms a period of sustained excellence and adds a notable chapter to WTA history.
Whatever unfolds at the WTA Finals, the statistical and historical landmarks of Sabalenka’s season are already established. She finishes 2025 as the sport’s year-end No. 1, with a set of achievements that underline both peak performance and remarkable consistency.
ATP Grand Slam Roland Garros
Books on Alcaraz and Sinner Clarify a New Chapter in Men’s Tennis
Two books on Alcaraz and Sinner illuminate how their rivalry reshaped men’s tennis in 2024–25. Today
Two recent books arrive at a pivotal moment in men’s tennis, documenting the rapid ascent of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner and the rivalry that has defined 2024 and 2025. Mark Hodgkinson’s Being Carlos Alcaraz supplies the biographical detail and environment that shaped Alcaraz, while Giri Nathan’s Changeover examines the rivalry and the broader cultural moment that surrounds it.
Hodgkinson traces Alcaraz from El Palmar to Juan Carlos Ferrero’s academy in Alicante, and highlights formative episodes: the five-year-old who “loved to bash the ball against the backboard” and a lockdown stint at the academy that accelerated his progress. The book also describes Alcaraz’s psychological training. “When they spoke on Mondays, Alcaraz wasn’t allowed to tell Cutillas whether he had won or lost his latest match, only how he thought he had played,” Hodgkinson writes. “Giving attention to the result would have reduced Alcaraz’s tennis to winning or losing, to being a success or a failure, and Cutillas didn’t want that for him.” Hodgkinson adds, “Cutillas was hoping that as a boy, and maybe deeper into his tennis life, he would be less interested in his results than in whether he was improving and meeting the standards he was setting for himself.”
Nathan’s Changeover is more literary and frames the players within the modern rivalry narrative. He writes that Alcaraz’s game “combined so many traits that didn’t belong together into a single psychedelic point.” Nathan also offers a vivid aside describing Daniil Medvedev as “the expansive plane of his forehead, those cunning beady eyes, the physiognomy of a supervillain plotting to take down the power grid.”
Both books contrast the two men’s temperaments and origins. Sinner’s upbringing in Sexten and his late shift from skiing to tennis are presented alongside anecdotes about his planning and precision, including the moment he told his coach “to stay f-ing calmer” and then dismissed him. Sinner called it “very, very strange” to come from a skiing village and become a tennis player.
Together the books explain how these players rose out of a long era of stasis at the top and set expectations for what the next phase of men’s tennis might look like.
ATP Grand Slam US Open
Facundo Bagnis begins voluntary provisional suspension after positive test
Facundo Bagnis accepts provisional suspension after positive test for hydrochlorothiazide in August..
Facundo Bagnis has begun a voluntary provisional suspension after testing positive for hydrochlorothiazide, the International Tennis Integrity Agency announced. The 35-year-old Argentine’s positive result came during qualifying at the US Open in August, and the ITIA classified the substance in the category of diuretics and masking agents.
Bagnis lost in the first round of US Open qualifying, a defeat that was his sixth consecutive loss in Grand Slam qualifying matches. He reached a career-high ranking of No. 55 in 2016.
The player was notified of the test result this month and opted to start a provisional suspension last week. The ITIA process allows a provisional suspension to be credited as time served if a later ban is imposed.
In a social media statement, Bagnis denied knowingly taking any banned substance and said he has assembled legal and medical support to pursue a possible cross-contamination defense. He wrote: “I want to be clear, I’ve never knowingly taken anything prohibited, that’s why I’m confident in my innocence and that the truth will come to light and reveal a fair outcome,” Bagnis wrote on Instagram , calling the situation ‘one of the worst moments of my professional career.’
“The news has taken me completely by surprise,” he added. “Since the beginning, I have cooperated with the ITIA and been completely and totally transparent in order to clear everything up as quickly as possible.
“Additionally, I have chosen to accept a voluntary provisional suspension in order to dedicate my full attention to this process and to demonstrate that I have nothing to hide.”
Bagnis said he is working with a team that includes lawyers and a medical toxicologist as he prepares his response to the ITIA. The agency’s announcement confirmed the substance and the provisional suspension but did not detail the next steps in the investigation.
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