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The Major Reason Steffi Graf Rejects Multi-Million Dollar Alcohol Endorsement, Citing Her Faith and Principles

Tennis legend Steffi Graf has once again proven that integrity cannot be bought — not even for millions. The 22-time Grand Slam champion recently turned down a lucrative endorsement deal from a major alcohol brand, reportedly worth several million dollars, making headlines around the world. Her reason was simple, yet deeply powerful: “It is against my faith to endorse alcohol to the people.”

In an age where athletes and celebrities often chase endorsement opportunities that come with hefty paychecks, Graf’s decision stands out as a rare display of personal conviction over profit.

Faith Over Fortune

Graf, widely respected for her grace both on and off the court, has always been known to lead a private and grounded life. While many sports icons transition into endorsements and business ventures post-retirement, Graf has chosen a more selective and values-driven approach.

According to sources close to the deal, the proposed partnership involved a global campaign promoting a premium liquor product. The offer was said to include television commercials, social media promotions, and even limited-edition branded items featuring Graf’s image.

However, the German tennis great was quick to decline the proposal, stating:

“It is against my faith to endorse alcohol to the people. No matter how tempting the offer, my beliefs and the example I want to set are more important.”

Steffi Graf

Graf, who has often spoken about her Christian faith in interviews, emphasized that accepting such a deal would conflict with the values she holds dear — especially regarding the influence she still wields over younger generations and fans who look up to her.

A Message in a Material World

Graf’s decision resonates deeply in a modern world saturated with influencer culture, where endorsements can often blur the lines between genuine support and financial motivation. Many celebrities rarely consider the societal implications of the brands they promote, especially those related to alcohol, gambling, or unhealthy habits.

Yet, Graf is sending a clear message: not everything is for sale.

This principled stance also reflects her long-standing character. Throughout her storied tennis career, which spanned from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s, Graf maintained a spotless reputation. She was known for her quiet discipline, sportsmanship, and ability to let her racquet do the talking — avoiding controversy and scandal while racking up one of the most impressive records in sports history.

Even after retirement, Graf has chosen a path rooted in family, philanthropy, and quiet leadership, supporting causes such as children’s health and education through her foundation, Children for Tomorrow.

Steffi Graf

Industry Reactions and Public Praise

The decision has garnered widespread praise from fans, athletes, and commentators across the globe. Social media platforms lit up with admiration, applauding Graf for her courage and values.

One fan wrote on X (formerly Twitter):

“Steffi Graf just reminded the world what integrity looks like. Million-dollar deals come and go, but dignity lasts forever.”

Another added:

“In a world where people sell anything for a check, she chose her faith. That’s the mark of a true role model.”

Several athletes have also weighed in, highlighting how difficult it can be to walk away from such offers — and how rare it is to see someone do it for moral reasons.

Novak Djokovic has been practicing with shock star he could meet in the Wimbledon quarterfinals

Novak Djokovic has been in inspired form at Wimbledon, dropping just one set in matches against Alexandre Muller, Daniel Evans, and Miomir Kecmanovic

The World No. 6 looks back to his best at Wimbledon, despite Djokovic finding his Kecmanovic match ‘strange’ in the third round.

With the draw opening up as wide as ever, Djokovic could be about to play his practice partner in the quarterfinal.

Novak Djokovic could play Flavio Cobolli in Wimbledon quarterfinal

Italian Flavio Cobolli has been one of the surprises of this year’s Wimbledon, particularly with his stunning win over Jakub Mensik in the third round.

The star revealed how Djokovic aided him in arguably the biggest win of his career against the World No. 17.

“Yesterday I practiced with Nole and I think this helped a lot for the match today,” explained Cobolli to The Tennis Channel.

Novak Djokovic

READ MORE : ‘I couldn’t believe it’ Roger Federer received bizarre gift after

The Italian, who also beat Beibit Zhukayev and Jack Pinnington-Jones at the tournament, divulged more information on what the two got up to on the practice courts.

“We had a chill practice but a very emotional and it means a lot because he’s my biggest idol and playing with him is always different,” explained Cobolli.

RELATED : Rafa Nadal’s First Comments About Carlos Alcaraz Ring True

Both men could be set to see much more of each other as they could be lined up for a shock Wimbledon quarterfinal, should they get past their respective fourth round ties.

Cobolli plays former Wimbledon finalist Marin Cilic, while Djokovic will need to get past Australian Alex De Minaur.

Rafael Nadal

Goran Ivanisevic makes Novak Djokovic favourite for Wimbledon

Many have called this year’s Wimbledon Djokovic’s last chance to win a Grand Slam, but his former coach Goran Ivanisevic is not so sure.

He makes the Serbian the favourite for the tournament, despite the dominance of Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz this year.

MORE NEWS : 2025 French Open, Carlos Alcaraz hits back perfectly at

“Novak’s the favourite, no matter how sentimental that sounds,” explained the 2001 Wimbledon champion in an interview with Clay Tennis.

carlos alcaraz

“Everyone says this is his last chance — I don’t agree,” continued Ivanisevic. “Plus, he’s the best grass-court player, experienced, he knows exactly what it takes here. It’ll be fascinating.”

Ivanisevic coached Djokovic between 2019 and 2024, and the Croatian is currently working with Stefano Tsitsipas

Rafa Nadal’s First Comments About Carlos Alcaraz Ring True Ahead of Wimbledon Quarterfinals

What Rafa Nadal said about Carlos Alcaraz when the young tennis player was first coming up in the sport rings true more than four years later after the Spaniard secured the fifth major of his career at the French Open earlier in the summer, and remains on course to challenge at Wimbledon

Alcaraz has showcased elite abilities in tennis’s top tournaments since 2022, when he won his maiden major at the US Open on a hard surface. Since then, he’s won twice on grass at Wimbledon, and twice on clay, too.

Nadal first played Alcaraz in an ATP event in 2021 at the Madrid Open. Though Nadal won in straight sets with scores of 6-1 and 6-2, the veteran was left impressed by the young whipper-snapper’s potential. And those words seem more relevant than ever, as Alcaraz makes his march toward a sixth major championship.

What Rafa Nadal Once Said About Carlos Alcaraz

Nadal told reporters following the second round win over Alcaraz that “somebody at his age” doing the things he was doing, was “something special. At the same time, he’s humble enough to keep working. He’s passionate about the game.”

READ MORE : 2025 French Open, Carlos Alcaraz hits back perfectly at

carlos alcaraz

“I really believe that he’s a complete player.”

Nadal continued: “He’s brave, he’s able to go to the net very often. Great forehand, great backhand.”

On the improvements he’d like to see from the phenom, he said: “Of course needs to improve a little bit the serve, but he’s just 18 today, so he has plenty of time. As I said, he’s humble enough and he’s a hard worker, so I don’t have a doubt that he will do it, no? His movement is great. He has plenty of ingredients to become a great player. That’s the main thing.”

The one thing that may hinder Alcaraz’s success was not himself, Nadal said, but the “quality of the big opponents” in front of him. “Nothing is easy in this life. Be one of the best players in the world and fight for the most important titles is something very difficult, but I really believe that he’s one of the guys that he can do it.”

Alcaraz returns to the court on Tuesday, the 8th of July, for his quarterfinal against the British player Cameron Norrie. The semifinals for the men’s singles tournament takes place Friday, before Sunday’s final.

Wimbledon: Congratulation Cameron Norrie With Two Colleagues reaches quarter-finals with Carlos Alcaraz next as Sonay Kartal is beaten

Carlos Alcaraz: Britain’s last remaining hope in singles Cameron Norrie made it through to the quarter-finals of Wimbledon after beating Chilean qualifier Nicolas Jarry in five sets.

The 29-year-old led by two sets and had a match point in the third, but was taken to a fifth by the towering Chilean.

However, Norrie held his nerve in the decider and did not drop serve all day in a 6-3 7-6 (7-4) 6-7 (7-9) 6-7 (5-7) 6-3 victory over a gruelling four hours and 27 minutes to return to the last eight for the first time since 2022.

Norrie, the world No 61, a semi-finalist here in 2022 is now only the third British man to reach the last eight more than once in the last 50 years, after Tim Henman and Andy Murray and now the last home player left in the tournament.

RELATED NEWS : 2025 French Open, Carlos Alcaraz hits back perfectly at

Norrie, who has now won nine of his 10 matches on his favourite Court One, said: “I hung tough when I needed to and the atmosphere was so good.

carlos alcaraz

“Credit to Nico, he did an unbelievable job staying with me. I just had to keep fighting.

“It’s my coach’s birthday and I forgot to get him a present, so I got him the win.”

Jarry, 6ft 7in South American, was clearly unhappy about something at the end, with the two players engaged in a long, heated conversation after shaking hands.

“He said I was a little bit vocal, but that’s my energy. It was a competitive match,” added Norrie.

Norrie scrambled brilliantly to snatch the first set with what proved to be the only break of the first four.

He took the second on a tie-break and had match point in the third-set tiebreak, only for towering Jarry to save it and force a fourth set, which he sealed with an ace.

READ MORE : ‘Most special day of my life’: world No 733 Tarvet enjoys

carlos alcaraz

Jarry, who has seen his ranking plummet from 16 this time last year to 143 due to a health issue which has affected his vision and balance came through qualifying before knocking out eighth seed Holger Rune, American Learner Tien and Brazilian wonderkid Joao Fonseca to reach the fourth round.

He banged down 46 aces to take his tournament-leading tally to 111, but Norrie returned superbly to break early in the decider, save three break points in the next game and close out victory in a marathon encounter.

2025 French Open, Carlos Alcaraz hits back perfectly at Nick Kyrgios after his controversial ‘girls’ and ‘partying’ claim

Carlos Alcaraz  is currently defending his Wimbledon title having won the 2025 French Open earlier this year.

The Spaniard bested Andrey Rublev in a mouth-watering round of 16 clash on Sunday evening to make it 18 Wimbledon wins in a row as he continues his bid to win a three-peat at the All England Club.

Five-time Grand Slam winner Alcaraz looks set to dominate the world of tennis for years to come having won five Grand Slams before turning 23.

He is currently engaged in a fiercely contested rivalry with Italy’s Jannik Sinner, who he beat at Roland-Garros in the French Open final last month.

The pair have gone back and forth for some time now, drawing comparisons with the rivalries shared between tennis’ fabled ‘Big Four’ of Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic.

Kyrgios was asked which player he felt would have the better career, and he opted to go with Sinner due to Alcaraz’s exploits off the court.

carlos alcaraz

READ MORE : “In Thrilling Battle” – Carlos Alcaraz In Wimbledon Round Four

“I’ll say Sinner, because Alcaraz likes girls,” he said, in an interview with tennis coach Patrick Mouratoglou.

“He might get distracted, he might party too much.

“That’s my only thing, whereas Sinner will stay a bit locked in, I think.”

The comments were particularly surprising considering Alcaraz currently has five Grand Slams to his name compared with Sinner’s three.

Alcaraz struck back though, suggesting that he found the comments funny.

“They’re funny comments, which coming from him doesn’t surprise me,” he responded.

“It’s no secret that Jannik has fewer ups and downs than me. It’s something I’ve been working on.

“It has nothing to do with the nightlife world.”

carlos alcaraz

Alcaraz has been open about his struggles off the court, admitting that tennis has been a source of anxiety and frustration for him during his Netflix documentary series, Carlos Alcaraz: My Way.

“Right now my biggest fear of all is ending up seeing tennis as an obligation,” the Spaniard said.

“Sometimes I feel like I am enslaved to tennis and that causes anxiety, frustration, doubts.”

Jannik Sinner Beats 21-year Roger Federer Record As Wimbledon Title Charge Continues

Jannik Sinner cruised into the fourth round at Wimbledon and surpassed Roger Federer to a stunning record in the process.

The world no. 1 overcame Pedro Martinez with a 6-1 6-3 6-1 victory on Centre Court, his third straight sets win in SW19 this year.

Sinner, who is back to Grand Slam action after his French Open final defeat to Carlos Alcaraz, is on course for a lengthy Wimbledon run.

And one statistic has shown just how impressive he has been so far as he prepares for his fourth consecutive appearance in round four.

Amongst the top seeds at Wimbledon, the Italian has conceded the fewest games en route to the last 16 in the Open Era with just 17.

READ MORE : Novak Djokovic joins Roger Federer in exclusive Wimbledon

Roger Federer

Federer had previously done so with only 19 games lost in 2004.

This will come as a good omen for Sinner as the Swiss legend went on to win Wimbledon that same year.

Sinner has won three Grand Slam titles but none of them have come at the most prestigious tournament of them all.

A 2023 semi-final finish is his best outcome on the hallowed grass courts as he lost to the eventual runner-up Novak Djokovic.

The 23-year-old is the reigning champion at the Australian Open and US Open, the former of which he has won in the last two years.

A Career Grand Slam is certainly achievable for Sinner another year, and a win over Alcaraz at the French Open final would have come as a big boost.

RELATED : Just A look back Roger Federer was shocked at the craziest

Roger Federer

But only Wimbledon glory will be at the forefront of his mind, with Grigor Dimitrov opponent in the fourth round.

“Every time you enter a Grand Slam in the first week it is special, even more so at Wimbledon,” he said after.

“We are trying to keep pushing but this week could not have gone better for me.”

Sinner, Alcaraz and Taylor Fritz are the remaining top five seeds in a tournament that had produced plenty of shocks.

Alexander Zverev and Jack Draper have faced early exits, with Lorenzo Musetti, Holger Rune and Daniil Medvedev also out.

Novak Djokovic joins Roger Federer in exclusive Wimbledon men’s club

Novak Djokovic brought up a century of Wimbledon wins as he moved smoothly into the fourth round. The 38-year-old eased past fellow Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic 6-3 6-0 6-4 on Centre Cour

Djokovic is now just five wins behind Wimbledon’s only other male centurion, his great rival Roger Federer on 105 match victories.

“Very historic, it sounds very nice,” he said. “Tennis made me who I am, it has given me incredible things in life so I try not to take anything for granted, especially at my age and trying to compete with the younger players.

“Wimbledon is a favourite tournament, not just for myself but for most players. Any history I make at my favourite tournament, I’m blessed

Apart from being broken when he served for the match, it was a pretty routine display for the seven-time champion, although one spectacular diving backhand volleyed winner after a lung-busting rally will make the highlights reel.

That shot thrilled the Saturday SW19 crowd and a host of sports glitterati in the Royal Box including Sir Geoff Hurst, Sir Steve Redgrave and Lord Botham.

READ MORE : Novak Djokovic will not reflect until ‘on the beach with

The Centre Court punters could be forgiven for feeling a little short-changed, however, after three one-sided contests.

Certainly the 11pm curfew was never in danger after Jannik Sinner dropped just five games against Pedro Martinez and Iga Swiatek beat Danielle Collins in straight sets, before Djokovic disposed of his 25-year-old countryman in an hour and 47 minutes.

Djokovic, bidding for a record 25th grand slam title, will face Australian 11th seed Alex De Minaur in his 17th appearance in the last 16 at Wimbledon

In Thrilling Battle” – Carlos Alcaraz In Wimbledon Round Four Overcomes Jan-Lennard Struff In Thrilling Battle to Reach Wimbledon Round Four

Carlos Alcaraz, the defending Wimbledon champion, narrowly escaped a stunning upset in a gripping third-round showdown against Germany’s Jan-Lennard Struff. The match, played under the closed roof of Centre Court, lasted over four hours and left the Spaniard visibly relieved as he advanced to the fourth round.

Following the epic five-set victory, Alcaraz candidly admitted,

“That was stressful. Honestly, I had to dig deeper than I ever have on grass.”

The final scoreline read: 6–3, 6–7(5), 6–4, 6–7(4), 6–3—a rollercoaster of a contest that tested Alcaraz’s mental fortitude and physical limits.

The Match: High Drama from First Serve to Last

The opening set saw Alcaraz start strong, breaking early and moving fluidly across the court. His aggressive returns and signature drop shots kept Struff on the back foot, and the Spaniard took the set 6–3 in just under 40 minutes.

carlos alcaraz

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

However, things shifted dramatically in the second set. Struff, known for his booming serve and fearless hitting, began to find his rhythm. He pushed Alcaraz into longer rallies and matched him stroke-for-stroke, eventually snatching the tiebreak to level the match.

By the third set, the intensity had reached another gear. Alcaraz regained control, breaking at 4–4 to edge ahead and claim the set 6–4, but Struff wasn’t done yet. The fourth set saw both men dig into their reserves, with neither willing to blink. Once again, it was decided in a tiebreak, with the German forcing a decider to the delight of a stunned Centre Court crowd.

The fifth set was where Alcaraz’s championship pedigree shone through. A crucial break at 3–2 allowed him to seize the momentum, and he closed it out with clinical precision, sealing the win with an ace and raising his arms in a mix of triumph and relief.

READ MORE : Wimbledon 2025: Greatly 2-time defending champion Alcaraz

carlos alcaraz

Alcaraz: “You Have to Suffer to Win”

After the match, Alcaraz offered insight into his mindset during the tense moments:

“It’s about staying calm, even when your legs are tired, and your mind is screaming. You have to suffer sometimes to win. Today was one of those days.”

He also gave credit to Struff, who has become something of a “big match specialist” known for pushing elite players to the brink.

“Jan-Lennard played unbelievable tennis. His serve and forehand were firing. Honestly, I just had to survive at times.”

🇪🇸 Road to Title Defense

With this win, Alcaraz advances to the fourth round, where he’s expected to face either Tommy Paul or Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, both dangerous opponents in their own right.

The victory keeps Alcaraz on track to defend his Wimbledon title, a feat not achieved by a man under 25 since Roger Federer in the early 2000s.

RELATED : ‘Most special day of my life’: world No 733 Tarvet enjoys

carlos alcaraz

What’s Next?

Alcaraz’s fourth-round opponent poses a new set of challenges. If he wins that, a quarterfinal clash against either Jannik Sinner or Hubert Hurkacz could be on the cards—both opponents with the tools to make Alcaraz’s path to the final anything but straightforward.

He remains a top contender not just because of his power and precision, but because of his composure under pressure—something on full display in this near-escape against Struff.

Carlos Alcaraz’s third-round victory at Wimbledon 2025 was more than just another step toward defending his crown. It was a gritty, gut-wrenching reminder of what it takes to be a champion. On a day when he wasn’t at his best, he found a way to win—and in tennis, that’s often the most important skill of all.

carlos alcaraz

As the business end of the tournament approaches, one thing is clear: Alcaraz isn’t just surviving—he’s learning, adapting, and getting stronger. And that should worry the rest of the draw.

Novak Djokovic will not reflect until ‘on the beach with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal’ ahead of hitting Wimbledon milestone

Novak Djokovic: After securing his spot in the third round of Wimbledon with a straight-sets victory over Dan Evans, Novak Djokovic said he does not “have time” yet to reflect on his illustrious career.
Djokovic, hunting a record 25th Grand Slam title, displayed a serving masterclass on Centre Court, the venue which has seen him crowned Wimbledon champion on seven occasions, to oust Evans despite a bright start from the Brit.
Now aged 38, Djokovic continued his run to the third round, 20 years on from making his first appearance at the All England Club. But when asked whether he reflects on his past, Djokovic said he would only begin to do so when sipping “margaritas on the beach” with his old rivals.
“I don’t pause to reflect,” he said. “I don’t have time. Being on the highest level on professional tennis requires a lot of dedication.
“I don’t play as much as I did before but the weeks I don’t play, I play at home with my kids. I don’t reflect fully on everything I have been through.
Novak Djokovic

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“I would like to but I think that will come when I set the racquet aside and then sip margaritas on the beach with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal and just reflect on our rivalry and everything.”
A 25th Grand Slam title would see Djokovic pull clear of his joint-record alongside Margaret Court, and he could well have been handed a banana skin in drawing Evans for the second round.
The Brit’s singles ranking took a hit last year when he decided to join forces with the retiring Andy Murray to play doubles at the Olympic Games, rather than defend his ATP 500 title at the Citi Open. Having once been on the cusp of breaking into the top 20 of the men’s game, Evans, now ranked No. 154, triumphed in the pair’s only meeting in Monte Carlo four years ago.
But Djokovic found parity in their head-to-head record with a comfortable second-round victory, cruising to a 6-3 6-2 6-0conclusion, and credited the “special atmosphere” on Centre Court, despite the overriding consensus from the home crowd being in support of Evans.
“A Brit in Britain is never easy to face,” Djokovic said. “Dan Evans can be causing a lot of trouble if you are not on your game which I think I was from the beginning to be honest.

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The victory was Djokovic’s 99th at Wimbledon, and he will hunt a century against compatriot Miomir Kecmanovic in the third round.
On his chances of winning Wimbledon for an eighth time this month, he said: “If I play like today, I feel like I have a very good chance against anybody, really, on the Centre Court of Wimbledon, a place where I maybe feel the most comfortable on any court. Rod Laver Arena and Wimbledon Centre Court are the two courts where I’ve done so well throughout my career.
“I felt great physically, mentally sharp. Game-wise, I’m playing as well as I can, really, on grass. So hopefully I can keep it up.
“Of course, it’s great. You want to keep on playing this way. It can be only one day, one match. Tomorrow or in two days can be a different story. I don’t know. I’m trying to be cautious and keep it going. But yeah, aspirations and objectives are very high to go all the way.”

Wimbledon 2025: Rennae Stubbs Suggests The Main Reason Why Coco Gauff Lost in Wimbledon Round One

Coco Gauff: Ranked 42nd in the world, Yastremska pulled off a 7-6(7-3), 6-1 upset against WTA number two Gauff in London.

Gauff won the US Open after a Wimbledon first round loss back in 2023, with a repeat of that situation possible once more this year.

But the two-time Grand Slam champion is understandably disappointed with the result, although she isn’t the only female star to have suffered a shock exit.

Jessica Pegula fell in the first round to Elisabetta Cocciaretto, with former player Rennae Stubbs referencing the American in her analysis of Gauff’s defeat.

Speaking of Gauff, she said on The Rennae Stubbs Tennis Podcast: “Do I think she lost because of that [lack of preparation]?

“She sort of said in press she would approach things differently but I don’t think that was the issue. I think you could look at it and did it contribute? Maybe.

Coco gauff

READ MORE : “After surprise defeat”Coco Gauff has decided what she will

“Because she did not have the prep that she needed on grass and I think that’s definitely possible that she did not have enough practice matches on grass.

“But I think this just came down to match up. I think if she played a Cocciaretto, I don’t think she would have liked Coco’s game like she liked Jessie’s game.

“Jess hits the ball really flat and hard into her hands. She is smaller in stature, the ball comes into her hitting zone. You have to always think about that.

“If Coco plays Petra Kvitova who is maybe not at her best and she is serving the ball to Coco’s backhand and Coco is getting her moving, Coco probably wins that match.

“When you think about Yastremska this is the biggest and worst match up for Coco in the first round. If Coco was confident coming in on grass, I still think that is a really hard match up.

“What does Yastremska do? She is the one, two, three maximum punch player. Bang with the return, bang with the second shot, serve plus one. She is not the type of person to rally for six or seven.

Coco gauff

“Pegula probably has a better chance against Yastremska because she is going to get the ball back harder and Yastremska’s ability to hit five great shots, very rare, two or three very good.

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“So you have two problems. Coco’s forehand on clay gets up high and out of people’s hitting zones. She has time to run balls down on clay. She would not lose to Yastremska on clay, no way.”

Rennae Stubbs says what Coco Gauff should have done against Dayana Yastremska

A long list of seeded players have really struggled at the grass court Grand Slam this year, particularly the top women.

Four of the top five WTA seeds are now out of the competition, which includes 2024 runner-up Jasmine Paolini.

She is joined by Gauff, Pegula and Qinwen Zheng, with world number one Aryna Sabalenka the last such player standing.

The Belarusian will certainly have plenty of motivation to go all the way this month, having lost the Australian Open and French Open finals this year.

She lost the first to Madison Keys and the second to Gauff, who will soon turn her focus to the hard courts of the US Open.

Coco gauff

Continuing her analysis of the 21-year-old on the current tour surface, however, Stubbs said of Gauff: “But on grass you do not have to take so much risk because if you hit the ball at 90mph on grass and it’s into the open court I don’t care how fast you are, Coco is the fastest player on tour, you are not getting to that ball.

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

“On clay, you are getting to that ball and it’s going to come back and you are going to take more risk and miss.

“On grass her forehand is short, they can go one, two point is over and there is nothing Coco can do. Is she going to start striking the forehand bigger? Maybe. But that’s not her game.

“So my thought is that she should have been chipping and playing ugly when Yastremska hits the serve to the forehand, rather than try and crush the forehand, chip it back, make it ugly!

“Chip it below the net and you know she is not comfortable coming in. You have to have game plan B and that wasn’t the case.”

Coco gauff

It will certainly be intriguing to see how Gauff deals with the shock loss, and more importantly if and how she will change her grass game to avoid future upsets.

She can, however, still hold her head very high regarding her season overall, which does, of course, include a superb Roland Garros title.