WTA WTA 1000 Wuhan Open
Gauff’s Year-End Reset Pays Off in Wuhan; Vacherot’s Shanghai Run Rewrites the Book
Gauff won Wuhan treating late-season events like practice; Vacherot, ranked 204, won Shanghai. 2025.
Coco Gauff used the Asian swing to recalibrate and left Wuhan with a title after five dominant matches. “That’s just how tennis works,” Coco Gauff told a fellow player in the locker room in Wuhan this week. “It always happens when you don’t expect it to.”
For the second straight year Gauff arrived in Asia after a rocky U.S. hard-court season, and despite suggestions from her coach to remain at home and practice, she traveled and produced an immediate turnaround. In 2024 she won Beijing and reached the Wuhan semifinals. In 2025 she reached the Beijing semifinals and captured Wuhan.
“I think the U.S. swing is very stressful for all the American players,” Gauff said this week. “I think just coming here on the other side of the world where there’s maybe less attention on us makes me feel a little bit freer playing here.” She also framed the late season as lower-stakes preparation. “It just feels different at the end of the year,” Gauff said when she got to Beijing three weeks ago. “I feel definitely a lot lighter. It feels, again, like a practice tournament. So we’ll see how it goes.”
In Wuhan she did not drop a set in five matches, produced two 6-0 sets early, and defeated Jasmine Paolini and Jessica Pegula in the semifinal and final. Coming into the title match she had broken serve 22 times. Even when errors crept in — five straight double faults at one point against Paolini and only 27 percent of second-serve points in that match — she recovered. After a shaky moment at 4-4 in the final, she responded with an ace and a crosscourt backhand winner to hold. As one commentator observed, Coco “managed her double faults” well over the past two weeks. She finished the final with 24 winners to Pegula’s 13 and closed the match with a forehand pass after a 10-point run when trailing 4-5 in the second.
“I have no idea what’s happening right now,” Valentin Vacherot said after the Rolex Shanghai Masters on Sunday. Ranked 204th and with one prior ATP-level match win, Vacherot won eight matches, three in qualifying, and in five matches recovered from losing the first set. He beat Novak Djokovic in the semifinals in straight sets and then faced his cousin Arthur Rinderknech in the final, a one-family matchup and a former Texas A&M pairing.
“When I’m down, I have no choice and need to bring my A-game,” Vacherot said of the mindset he had developed in Shanghai. “There has to be one loser but I think there is two winners today, one family that won,” said Vacherot, who is four years younger than his cousin. Vacherot became the first qualifier since 2001 to win an ATP Masters 1000 title, the lowest-ranked player to win a Masters 1000, and the first Monegasque to win a title of any sort. After the final he wrote, “Grandpa and Grandma would be proud.” In the deciding set he produced 17 winners and made two errors.
ATP United Cup WTA
Hurkacz’s 21 aces power Poland to United Cup sweep over Germany; Zverev fumes
Hurkacz hit 21 aces in return from injury, beating Zverev as Poland completed a 3-0 United Cup sweep
Hubert Hurkacz returned from injury with a commanding performance, firing 21 aces to defeat Alexander Zverev and set the tone for Poland’s 3-0 sweep of Germany at the United Cup in Sydney.
Hurkacz, making his first match appearance since June 2025, upset Zverev 6-3, 6-4 in one hour and 24 minutes. Formerly world No. 6 and currently ranked No. 83, Hurkacz saved the only break point he faced while his serve repeatedly overpowered the world No. 3.
The tie opened with Hurkacz’s win, and WTA world No. 2 Iga Swiatek followed by defeating Eva Lys to give Poland an insurmountable lead. The mixed doubles pairing of Katarzyna Kawa and Jan Zielinski then closed out the day with a 7-6 (6), 6-3 victory over Alexander Zverev and Laura Siegemund to complete the sweep.
A frustrated Zverev was vocal during a changeover, addressing his father and coach, Alexander Zverev Sr., a former top Soviet Union player. “Why am I not serving? No, he hasn’t played in two f###ing years and he comes out serving at 230 km/h,” Zverev ranted in Russian. “In the evening, when it’s cold, f###. It’s f###ing crazy. The guy can barely f###ing walk, and he’s serving.”
The result put Poland (1-0) atop Group F after two days of round-robin play. Germany (1-1) sits second in the group after sweeping all three matches against the Netherlands (0-1). Poland will face the Netherlands on Wednesday in the final Group F match.
For Hurkacz, the victory marked the 20th Top 10 win of his career and represented an encouraging step in his comeback. “(I’m) just very happy to be back competing again,” Hurkacz said during Team Poland’s press conference. “It was a difficult match against Sascha, and I was quite happy with my performance. ]
© 2026 Getty Images
ATP United Cup WTA
United Cup Day 5: Teens Mboko and Joint to test experienced Mertens and Krejcikova
United Cup Day 5 preview: young challengers face veterans, mixed group standings and key matches. D5.
Four days into the season at the United Cup, several established players and newcomers are still finding their rhythm.
Recent results from Day 4 included Casper Ruud following a win over Alex de Minaur with a loss to Jakub Mensik. Alexander Zverev, after winning his opening match, lost to Hubert Hurkacz. Coco Gauff and Taylor Fritz finished the day with 1-1 singles records.
The most notable outcomes on the women’s side saw Iga Swiatek win her 2026 debut over Eva Lys, with Lys pushing the match to 6-4 in the third set. Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, ranked 40th, beat Gauff 6-1 in the first set and 6-0 in the third. Maria Sakkari recorded consecutive quality wins over Naomi Osaka and Emma Raducanu; coming in, she was 0-4 against the Brit.
At the competition midpoint the group leaders are: A: USA; B: China; C: Switzerland; D: Czechia; E: Greece; F: Germany.
Day 5 highlights and scheduling:
Sydney
– Canada vs. Belgium (10:30 A.M. local; 6:30 P.M. ET)
– Australia vs. Czechia (5:30 P.M. local; 1:30 A.M. ET)
Perth
– Italy vs. France (10:00 A.M. local; 9:00 P.M. ET)
Key individual matches in Perth:
– Victoria Mboko vs. Elise Mertens: The 19-year-old Canadian meets the 30-year-old Belgian for the first time. Each won her opening match.
– Maya Joint vs. Barbora Krejcikova: Another 19-year-old versus 30-year-old pairing and a first meeting. Joint was scheduled to play two days ago but was ill.
– Alex de Minaur vs. Jakub Mensik: Mensik is 20 and has already lost to De Minaur four times.
– Flavio Cobolli vs. Arthur Rinderknech: The 30-year-old Frenchman leads their head-to-head 2-1; the 23-year-old Italian is described as the man on the rise.
Day 5 also records two team results: Canada d. Belgium 2-1 and Australia d. Czechia 2-1.
ATP Player News WTA
Vesnina rejects claim that podcast aired unapproved Kudermetova anecdote about Rune
Vesnina defended her podcast after Kudermetova said an off-camera anecdote about Rune aired. on air.
Elena Vesnina has pushed back after Veronika Kudermetova said part of her 2025 interview on Vesnina’s podcast was broadcast without consent. The former WTA doubles No. 1, now a full-time analyst and podcaster since retiring in 2024, defended the episode and her production team.
“My interview with Veronika was one of the first I had done for my podcast last year,” Vesnina said. “I would have never posted anything that my guest had a problem with or asked for me to remove, nor would my production team have put it on the air.”
Kudermetova, the married world No. 30, objected to an anecdote included in the podcast cold open in which she recounted an ATP player, Holger Rune, contacting her on social media. “It was just a private conversation between me and Elena Vesnina while we were setting up the cameras before the interview; I didn’t think they would include it in the final version,” Kudermetova said. “That is, the story about Rune was off-camera. I even asked them not to include that segment. But in the end, the podcast was released, and it turned out to be quite provocative.”
Vesnina said her team discussed the material with Kudermetova immediately after the interview and that no objection was raised at the time. “We discussed the comments with her straight away after the interview and she didn’t tell us there was anything couldn’t publish,” Vesnina said. “But this situation has gotten out of control. For me, it was not necessary to bring so much attention to this situation.”
Kudermetova expressed regret that Rune faced criticism and ridicule after the anecdote circulated. The story was later reiterated by Anna Kalinskaya in a separate interview with Anna Chakvetadze. Vesnina reflected on the wider implications: “Veronika is not the only player to have told a story like this,” Vesnina said. “I think we’ve all learned something from this. When it comes to Holger, I think it was a good lesson for him to be more careful.”
A two-time Olympic medalist and four-time Grand Slam doubles champion, Vesnina has been visible in media coverage; she went viral last fall after pressing world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz about his relationship status at the ATP Finals. “I’m free!” smiled Alcaraz.
-
ATPBergamo ChallengerChallenger 1002 months agoMaestrelli Triumphs in Bergamo, Claims Challenger Title and Career‑High Ranking
-
ATPLaver CupMasters2 months agoAlcaraz and Fritz Confirmed to Return for 2026 Laver Cup at The O2
-
Davis CupFinalsPlayer News2 months agoCarlos Alcaraz Withdraws From Davis Cup Finals After Right Hamstring Problem
