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Double Champion: Wimbledon Day 2 Women’s Predictions Including Coco Gauff vs Dayana Yastremska

Coco Gauff looks to make it a double championship as the French Open winner will be tested in her opening match against Dayana Yastremska at Wimbledon 2025. We have predictions for every first round match in London.

Coco Gauff vs Dayana Yastremska

Manuel: Gauff is fresh off a maiden Roland Garros title and while she is quite unlikely to replicate that success on grass, she should definitely at least make it through this first round without many issues.
Prediction: Gauff in 2

Yesh: Coco Gauff is on top of the world right now. Will she win Wimbledon? Maybe, maybe not. Will she win this match, against a strong opponent, without trouble? Absolutely.
Prediction: Gauff in 2

Damian: If Gauff loses here, it wouldn’t be due to any hangover after winning Roland Garros. It’s just that her defensive playstyle isn’t quite as effective on grass and a massive ball-striker like Yastremska could take advantage. You never know what you’re going to get from the Ukrainian, but I’ll actually try calling the upset here. Yastremska in 3

READ MORE : French Open, Coco Gauff Becomes First American Woman Since

Caty McNally vs Jodie Burrage

Coco gauff

Manuel: A match between two players outside the top 150 at a Slam is quite a rarity, but here we are. Burrage has far more match play on grass this season and that might well make the difference in her favour here. Prediction: Burrage in 3

Yesh: Caty McNally has a lot of potential, but she’s not quite there yet. That’s a tough place to be against a Brit in Wimbledon. Prediction: Burrage in 3

Damian: It’s not like last year when Burrage was out for six months, this time she’s playing regularly but just not winning the matches. While she defeated McNally in the opening round at Wimbledon two years ago, it feels like this time the American might get on top of the baseline against her more easily. McNally in 3

French Open, Coco Gauff Becomes First American Woman Since Serena Williams To Win French Open

Coco Gauff roared back from a set down to capture her first Roland Garros title and become the first American woman in a decade to win the French Open.

No. 2 Gauff overcame a first-set deficit to beat No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, 6-7(5), 6-2, 6-4 in windy conditions to become the first American woman since Serena Williams in 2015 to win the title in Paris. At 21, she is also the youngest champion since Serena in 2002.

Gauff became the seventh American woman to win Roland Garros in the Open Era. She won her second major following the 2023 U.S. Open, where she also overcame a one-set deficit to beat Sabalenka. Gauff is the second straight American woman to win a major after Madison Keys also defeated Sabalenka in three sets to win the Australian Open.

“I didn’t think honestly that I could do it,” Gauff said on court. “But I’m gonna quote Tyler the Creator right here. He said ‘If I ever told you I had a doubt inside me, I must be lying.’ I’d like to leave that with you guys. I think I was lying to myself and I definitely could do it. Shout out to Tyler.”

READ MORE : The world No 1: Coco Gauff admits ‘temptation’ to fire back at

Coco gauff

Gauff had previously lost in the 2022 French Open final in straight sets to Iga Swiatek.

Gauff takes home nearly $2.9 million and Sabalenka $1.4 million.

“I’d like to thank my parents,” Gauff said. “You guys have done a lot for me, from washing my clothes to keeping me grounded and giving me the belief that I can do it. You guys probably believe in me more than I do myself. I really appreciate and love you guys. To my brothers at home, you’re the reason I do this. You inspire me more than you know. To all my family at home, thank you.”

“I’d like to thank my team. 3 finals, but I got the most important one. I guess that’s all that matters. You guys have been a joy to be around and you guys are individually truly great people. Pushing me and also making it fun. I know sometimes I’m not the easiest and I can be so serious. But you remind me there’s more to life than tennis. That’s what makes me play better on the court. Thank you individually, to all of you. I appreciate you guys so much.”

READ MORE : Grand Slam Title Wimbledon 2025: Can Alcaraz and Gauff

In the decisive third set, Sabalenka double-faulted to give Gauff a break for 2-1.

Gauff led 3-1 and had break points for 4-1 but Sabalenka held and then broke for 3-all.

Coco gauff

Gauff roared back and broke at love for 4-3 with a backhand crosscourt winner. Sabalenka sailed a backhand long as Gauff seized a 5-3 lead.

Serving at 5-4, 30-all, Gauff crushed a forehand crosscourt winner to earn match point. But Sabalenka hit the baseline with a forehand that staved it off.

Sabalenka had a break point, but hit a forehand wide.

On the second match point, Sabalenka hit a backhand wide and Gauff felt to her back on the court.

In the aftermath of the match, Sabalenka did not give full credit to Gauff and instead blamed her own play on a day when she made 70 unforced errors, and said “it was the worst final I have ever played.”

“She won the match not because she played incredible, just because I made all those mistakes,” Sabalenka said.

“That hurts,” Sabalenka added. “Especially when you’ve been playing really great tennis during the whole week, when you’ve been playing against a lot of tough opponents, Olympic champion [Qinwen Zheng], Iga and then you go out, and you play really bad.

RELATED : We are friends: Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the

Coco gauff

“Like I think Iga… I think she would go out today and she would get the win. It just hurts. Honestly hurts. I’ve been playing really well, and then in the last match, go out there and perform like I did, that’s hurt.”

“No shade to Iga or anything, but last time I played her I won in straight sets. I don’t think that’s a fair thing to say, because anything can really happen.

“The way Aryna was playing the last few weeks, she was the favourite to win. So I think she was the best person that I could have played in the final.

“Her being No. 1 in the world was the best person to play, so I think I got the hardest matchup just if you go off stats alone.”

Sabalenka’s comments did not go over well with many in the tennis world.

“Ugh… the tennis was not that bad,” Stubbs wrote online. “You made a bazillion unforced errors because you’re playing against the fastest players in the world who is as gutsy as hell and had better composure then u!!”

In a first set that featured eight service breaks, Sabalenka roared out to a 4-1, 40- lead and appeared to be cruising. She won 16 of the first 22 points.

Coco gauff

Sabalenka stuck a forehand volley winner to win the first set in the tiebreak despite committing 32 unforced errors.

In the second set, Gauff raced out to a quick lead, winning 10 straight points to go up 2-0. She broke again for 5-2 and then served it, evening the match at one set apiece with a forehand overhead winner.

Asked how she would respond to losing the match, Sabalenka said: “I already have a flight booked to Mykonos. Alcohol. Sugar. I just need a couple days to completely forget about this crazy world and crazy… if I could swear right now I would.. this crazy thing that happened today. I think everyone understands. I’m just trying to be very polite right now. There is no other word that could describe what just happened today on the court. But yeah… Tequila. Gummy bears. And I don’t know, swimming. Being like a tourist for a couple days.”

Grand Slam Title Wimbledon 2025: Can Alcaraz and Gauff win another major? What about Djokovic?

Alcaraz: Just three weeks ago, Coco Gauff and Carlos Alcaraz were crowned French Open champions — and both are among the favorites again as Wimbledon begins Monday.

Alcaraz is the two-time defending champion at the All England Club — could he become the fifth man in the Open era to achieve a three-peat at Wimbledon? Or will Jannik Sinner avenge his French Open final loss to Alcaraz to win his first Grand Slam title on grass?

Gauff, meanwhile, has now won two major titles but has never made it past the fourth round at Wimbledon. And the women’s field is wide open — the past eight Wimbledon titles have been won by different women.

Could Aryna Sabalenka win her first Wimbledon title? Or will Iga Swiatek bounce back from a difficult year to claim the crown?

READ MORE : We are friends: Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the

And what about Novak Djokovic? Could he somehow win a record-breaking 25th Grand Slam title?

Aryna Sabalenka

How will Gauff follow up her French Open title?

D’Arcy Maine: Gauff arrives at Wimbledon — where she has been as beloved as just about any player since her breakthrough at the event in 2019 — brimming with confidence and self-belief and certainly could be in a position to have her best result at the tournament.

But it’s not going to be easy. Despite her auspicious debut six years ago at the All England Club in which she reached the fourth round, she has never advanced past that point and lost in her opening-round match in her lone grass-court lead-in event in Berlin earlier this month.

READ MORE : Carlos Alcaraz: Jannik Sinner’s Epic Clash with Carlos Alcaraz

And, perhaps most importantly, she is in an incredibly tough quarter of the draw and could face a number of challenging opponents, including Dayana Yastremska in the first round, potential second- and third-round meetings with former Australian Open champions Victoria Azarenka and Sofia Kenin (who upset her at Wimbledon in 2023), grass standout Liudmila Samsonova in the fourth round and either five-time major victor Iga Swiatek or 2022 Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina in the quarterfinals. So, that’s a tall order and I’m frankly exhausted just typing all of that. Gauff certainly could win all of those matches, but it seems unlikely she will win major title No. 3 during the fortnight.

Coco gauff

Bill Connelly: Gauff is definitely to the point where it would not be a surprise if she won any single tournament — her defense and speed are always elite, as is her ability to grind out wins when things threaten to go wayward. But her draw has so many landmines, and she’s only 9-6 on grass over the past two years. In fact, even including that initial upset of Venus Williams six years ago, she’s just 7-9 all time against top-50 players on grass, including three straight losses. She’ll likely have to get past three top-50 players just to get to Rybakina or Swiatek in the quarterfinals. That sounds like a bit too much to ask.

Simon Cambers: This could go one of two ways. Either Gauff goes to Wimbledon feeling as if she can do anything, buoyed by the confidence of winning at Roland Garros, or she’ll be exhausted, mentally, and lose early. It’s a funny one, this. In some ways, she should be high on confidence after winning the French Open and there’s no doubt that she’ll be walking even taller after coming out on top in Paris.

The world No 1: Coco Gauff admits ‘temptation’ to fire back at Aryna Sabalenka after controversial comments

Coco Gauff conceded she felt a “temptation” to fire back at Aryna Sabalenka after the Belarusian dismissed Gauff’s achievement following the French Open final.

The American won two sets to one in Paris earlier this month but rather than focus on the second Grand Slam win of her career, the story afterwards was instead on what Sabalenka had said.

While Sabalenka agreed that Gauff was a deserving champion, she went on to suggest the primary reason for the American winning was her poor performance.

The world No 1 later apologised but speaking ahead of the next slam in Wimbledon, Gauff admitted that the initial delay did tempt her to reply.

“It was very weird,” Gauff admitted. “I’m transparent. At first it was a little tempting just because the apology did come a little bit later. I thought it was going to come pretty quick.

“There’s obviously temptation. I wouldn’t be lying, but I don’t know, I just want us to be kumbaya, live happily, hakuna matata, and be happy here.

Coco gauff

“I didn’t want to fuel more hate. I’m not the person that will fuel hate in the world. I think people were taking it too far. It wasn’t even more holding someone accountable. It was just really like targeting and saying a lot of things that I felt like were not nice. I
didn’t want to fuel that more 

READ MORE : Carlos Alcaraz: Jannik Sinner’s Epic Clash with Carlos Alcaraz

“In general and immediately after in my press conference, I didn’t know what was exactly said. I was going based off what someone was saying in the press conference. I didn’t want to say anything unless I saw exactly what was said, too.”

Any possibility of bad blood still being there between the two was put to bed this week when the pair were spotted filming social media videos together on Centre Court.

The 21-year-old Gauff said that while she cannot promise to always get it right in the future, she aims to be someone her brothers can be proud of.

Coco gauff

“In general, I’m someone I preach love, I preach light. I feel like I just practice what I preach. If someone were to say something, I feel like most of the time I’m always going to try my best to take the high road.

“I can’t promise in the future I won’t, but I try to just because that’s what I would want someone to look up to. If I’m thinking about my brothers watching me, that’s what I would want them to do.”