Coco Gauff is back in the Italian Open final. The 22-year-old American defeated Sorana Cirstea 6-4, 6-3 on Thursday to advance to Saturday’s title match in Rome, ending a grueling run of three consecutive three-set wins that had tested her composure and fitness throughout the week.
A controlled performance when she needed it most
Gauff lost her opening service game but did not let it disrupt the rest of the set. She broke Cirstea twice in a row late in the first, taking the final three games to close it out 6-4. The second set was scrappier, with five breaks across nine games, but Gauff’s serve steadied at the moments that counted. She landed 79% of first serves and won 74% of points behind them. Cirstea saved just one of six break points and Gauff converted five of six chances. The American served out the match to love.
It was her first straight-sets win at the tournament since the second round, and statistically her most complete performance of the week.
What this week in Rome has meant
Getting through this tournament has required more than tennis ability. Gauff saved a match point against Iva Jovic in the fourth round while not playing anywhere near her best and came through a five-match-point quarter-final against Mirra Andreeva before finally closing out a win that lasted more than two hours.
She reflected on the weight of the week during her post-match interview on court, describing it as a marathon and expressing genuine gratitude to still be standing. She pointed to the Jovic match as a turning point, saying her level had improved with each round after getting through that one. The growth from match to match was visible in how Thursday’s performance unfolded.
A piece of Italian Open history
By reaching back-to-back finals in Rome, Gauff joined a short list of American women to accomplish that feat. Venus Williams did it in 1998 and 1999. Serena Williams followed in 2013 and 2014. Gauff is now the third.
She finished runner-up to Jasmine Paolini in last year’s final, which adds a layer of motivation heading into Saturday. This is her seventh WTA 1000 final overall and her second of 2026, having also reached the Miami final in March.
Who she will face on Saturday
Gauff’s opponent in the final will be either Iga Swiatek or Elina Svitolina, who meet in Thursday’s second semi-final. Both present different challenges and different storylines.
Against Swiatek, Gauff lost 11 of her first 12 meetings but has since won four straight, including a 6-1, 6-1 result in Madrid last year and a 6-4, 6-2 win at the United Cup in January. The head-to-head stands at 11-5 in Swiatek’s favor overall, but the recent trajectory belongs to Gauff.
Against Svitolina, the dynamic has shifted the other way. Gauff led their series 2-1 entering the season but lost both meetings in 2026, including a 6-1, 6-2 defeat at the Australian Open in January and a three-set loss in Dubai in February. Svitolina currently leads the head-to-head 3-2.
On paper, Gauff has more recent evidence of beating Swiatek. Whether that matters on clay in a final is a different question, but the numbers at least point in her direction if the Pole advances.
Saturday’s final begins at a time yet to be confirmed. Gauff arrives having played some of her best tennis of the clay season in the second half of this week, and with Roland Garros just two weeks away, the timing could not be better.

