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Alizé Cornet named captain of France’s Billie Jean King Cup team

Alize Cornet named France Billie Jean King Cup captain after retiring; will prepare Olympic team…

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Alizé Cornet has been appointed captain of France’s Billie Jean King Cup team a few months after retiring from tennis a second time earlier this year. The French tennis federation announced the nomination on Sunday, saying Cornet stood out from other candidates because of her “investment in French tennis, her profile, her motivation and her availability.”

The 35-year-old replaces Julien Benneteau, who held the role since 2019. Cornet’s remit will extend beyond the Billie Jean King Cup squad and includes preparing the French Olympic team leading up to the Los Angeles Games in 2028, monitoring national team players during competitions and overseeing youth teams.

“I appreciate the trust the federation has placed in me, and I am determined to do everything I can to help our players reach their full potential,” Cornet said in a statement. “My goal is to build a strong team spirit, based on high standards, solidarity, and a passion for the French jersey.”

Cornet brings the experience of a 20-year professional career to the role. Touted as a young prodigy, she achieved a career-high ranking of No. 11 in 2009 and won six singles titles. Known as a solid baseline player with a strong backhand, she also held the women’s record for most consecutive Grand Slam tournaments played at 69, a streak that ran from the 2007 Australian Open to last year’s French Open.

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The federation emphasized Cornet’s availability and motivation when confirming the appointment. Her new duties place her at the centre of France’s national-team planning as preparations begin toward future international events and the 2028 Olympic cycle.

Billie Jean King Cup Italian Open

Gauff and McNally reunite as “McCoco,” advance to Italian Open quarterfinals

Gauff and McNally reunited in Rome as “McCoco,” saved match point and reached Italian Open quarters.

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Coco Gauff and Caty McNally have reunited on court at this year’s Internazionali BNL d’Italia, teaming in doubles for the first time since April 2023. The American pairing, who adopted the nickname “McCoco” during the 2019 season after winning their first title in Washington D.C., reached the quarterfinals on Wednesday.

The two players have a shared history at the biggest stages. They recorded a run to the 2021 US Open final before splitting on tour after the 2022 Miami Open. McNally later returned to the US Open title match in 2022 with Taylor Townsend. Gauff celebrated her first doubles major with Katerina Siniakova at 2024 Roland Garros. Their most recent partnership before Rome came in April 2023, when they helped the U.S. win a Billie Jean King Cup Qualifier over Austria.

Back together in Rome, Gauff and McNally opened with a match in which they saved a match point against Aldila Sutjiadi and Janice Tjen. They then defeated Marie Bouzkova and Alexandra Panova on SuperTennis Arena, closing out the match 6-3, 7-5 on McNally’s serve. Play was briefly suspended when rain began during the changeover.

The match included gritty moments and flashes of the pair’s chemistry. Gauff fell mid point but rose to continue the rally, later missing the next shot. McNally produced a hustle dig that helped give them another opportunity after they failed to serve the match out initially. The pair kept the mood light at times, laughing through the highs and lows, and in their rush to celebrate they slightly mistimed their celly.

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Photographs from the victory, captured by Matt Fitzgerald, document Gauff’s attacking volley, the occasional mishap and the partnership’s renewed energy as they move deeper into the Italian Open doubles draw.

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Billie Jean King Cup Italian Open Masters

Bencic sharpens serve as Purina partnership donates 1,000 meals per ace

Purina gives 1,000 meals per ace via Bencic; she is practicing serve and began her Rome campaign…

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Belinda Bencic has added a new incentive to her service practice: every ace now fuels a cause. In March the Swiss announced a partnership with Purina Switzerland to promote the Pro Plan line, and as part of that deal Purina will donate 1,000 meals to animals in need for every ace she hits.

The initiative recently expanded at a Billie Jean King Cup Finals qualifier to include her teammates, and Bencic discussed the collaboration after winning her opening match at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia on Thursday.

“I’m very motivated to hit aces. I think it’s just a great project together, with a partnership that I really believe in,” Bencic told Tennis Channel’s Prakash Amritraj. “I love dogs, I love cats. I would love to have an animal shelter once I stop playing.

“I’m super proud and I’m practicing my serve a lot to do ace! It’s more tough here but in Madrid, I did quite well.”

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The No. 12 seed opened her Rome campaign by defeating Bianca Andreescu 6-4, 6-1, a follow-up to a fourth-round showing at the Mutua Madrid Open. Bencic has also balanced tournament life with family responsibilities; her two-year-old daughter Bella is not at this event and is staying with her grandparents.

“I miss her so much, but I’m getting like hundreds of videos per day. I miss her but it’s also nice to go out to restaurants, sleep in, and have a lot of time,” she laughed.

The partnership gives Bencic an added reason to focus on a traditionally high-payoff shot. By tying aces to meals for animals, the agreement with Purina Switzerland has become a tangible motivator on court and an opportunity to involve teammates and supporters off court. Photo: © 2026 Robert Prange

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Billie Jean King Cup Finals ITF

U.S. eliminated from Billie Jean King Cup qualifying after 3-1 loss to Belgium

U.S. eliminated from Billie Jean King Cup qualifying after 3-1 loss to Belgium in Ostend. Shenzhen .

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The United States will not compete for a place at the Billie Jean King Cup Finals after a 3-1 defeat to Belgium in Ostend. Belgium’s captain Wim Fissette watched Greet Minnen secure the tie with a straight-sets victory over Iva Jovic, completing the deciding match on Sunday.

Making her event debut, 18-year-old Iva Jovic lost twice for her nation. She was beaten by Hanne Vandewinkel, 7-6 (3), 6-3 on Friday and then fell 7-5, 6-3 to Minnen when Belgium closed out the tie.

The U.S. fell into an early deficit when McCartney Kessler was forced to retire at 3-3 against Elise Mertens because of a back injury. That retirement handed Belgium a 2-0 lead before the Americans responded on Saturday, when Caty McNally and Nicole Melichar-Martinez each won to put the team on the scoreboard.

U.S. captain Lindsay Davenport reflected on the tie afterwards. “We tried really hard all week to find our groove and to figure out how we were gonna play, how we’re gonna get three points.But Belgium played so well. They had a great crowd here,” she said.

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“We just never quite got to playing our best. We got a little bit of, obviously, bad luck with McCartney. She was playing great. We felt like she had really seized momentum in that match when things started to go the other way. But we’ll keep working. It’s a process for sure.”

Italy led the other successful nations in qualifying, and September’s Billie Jean King Cup Finals will once again be staged in Shenzhen. The U.S., a record 18-time champion, will not be among the teams contesting the Finals this year.

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