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HEARTBREAKING:Coco Gauff just passed away recently.... It was not because three sets were required to decide the victor that American tennis star Coco Gauff's first-round match versus German player Laura Siegemund at the 2023 U.S. Open lasted two hours and fifty-one minutes. For the majority of the match, Gauff suppressed her annoyance at Siegemund's slow play. However, on Monday night at Arthur Ashe Stadium, the tournament's sixth-ranked women's tennis player angrily blasted the chair umpire for failing to penalize Siegemund for Siegemund had won the first set 6-3, but she was constantly putting her arms in the chair to indicate that she was not prepared for Gauff's serves after Gauff won the second set 6-2 and had a resounding 3-0 lead in the third set. Siegemund had won the first set 6-3, but she was constantly putting her arms in the chair to indicate that she was not prepared for Gauff's serves after Gauff won the second set 6-2 and had a resounding 3-0 lead in the third set. The 19-year-old lost it at that point and expressed it verbally. "How is this fair? She walked over to talk about four times and she is never ready when I am serving. You only gave her a time violation once." Gauff shouted at the referee. Gauff responded to the chair umpire's response by saying, "No, it is not like we are playing extended points; you are calling the score after the point is over. Six seconds after the point has ended, you are calling the score!
Read moreSAD NEWS:Coco Gauff Rushed to the Hospital in a Critical Condition The U.S. Tennis Association has revealed its whole roster of American players, including Coco Gauff, who will compete in the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris on the clay courts of Roland Garros. Six first-time Olympians are on Team USA tennis' final singles and doubles roster, which was finalized just over a month before the Games begin in France. Paraphrase Gauff had already joined the squad in 2020, but he was unable to compete in the Tokyo Games because to the pandemic after testing positive for COVID-19 just days before the July 2021 start. Together with No. 5 Jessica Pegula, who missed the French Open this season due to a neck injury, No. 11 Danielle Collins in her final season, and No. 17 Emma Navarro, the current World No. 2 will make her Olympic debut. Gauff and Pegula, along with Collins and doubles No. 11 Desirae Krawczyk, will be on the women's doubles teams under coach and USTA Head of Women's Tennis Kathy Rinaldi. Paraphrase For the American women, especially Gauff, who advanced to the singles semifinals and won her maiden Grand Slam doubles victory at the French Open earlier this month, the clay of Roland Garros will be a familiar surface and stadium.
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