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Coco Gauff reveals off-court battles ahead of Italian Open final

The world No. 3 reached the Italian Open final against Elina Svitolina while acknowledging months of personal struggles she has chosen not to detail publicly.
Gesi LloydBy Gesi LloydMay 16, 2026 Sports No Comments5 Mins Read
Coco Gauff
'Coco Gauff' Photo credit: Shutterstock.com / lev radin
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Coco Gauff’s path to the Italian Open final has not looked pretty. She has dropped sets in three of her five matches in Rome, saved a match point against Iva Jovic in the round of 16, and came from a set down to beat Solana Sierra in the third round after losing the opening set. The scorelines tell the story of a player grinding through the draw rather than gliding through it.

After the Sierra match, Gauff explained why in terms that went well beyond tennis. She described the day as one where motivation had been hard to find before the match began, and said that once she was on court the competitive instincts took over, but that frustration followed close behind. When asked whether the difficulty was physical or mental, she was direct. She described it as personal matters away from the court that she has been working through, without elaborating further.

She then added that the struggle had not been limited to that one afternoon. It had been going on for several months, with better and worse days mixed in throughout.

What Gauff is and is not willing to say

Gauff drew a careful line during the press conference. She acknowledged that something has been affecting her but made clear she had no intention of sharing the specifics with the public. She described the balance she is trying to strike between being honest with the media and protecting her own privacy, and said there are certain off-court matters she simply does not want to discuss.

She was equally clear about what this situation is not. It is distinct from the difficulties she experienced during her partnership with coach Brad Gilbert in 2024, which she described at the time in tennis terms as a period when she lacked solutions within her game. The current challenge, she explained, exists separately from her confidence on the court. She said her serve has improved, her return has improved and she feels equipped within her tennis in a way she did not during that earlier period. The issue, as she framed it, is that her mind is somewhere else even when her game is in a better place than it has been.

She ended by saying tennis is what keeps her grounded through it. It is the part of her life that feels steady right now, and she described the importance of having things beyond the sport that bring her happiness as well.

Gauff and a generation that talks differently

The willingness to speak at all, even in general terms, is part of a shift that has been developing in women’s tennis for several years. Naomi Osaka’s decision to withdraw from the 2021 French Open over mental health concerns marked a turning point, creating space for top players to speak about struggles that had previously gone unacknowledged in public forums. Simone Biles reinforced that shift at the Tokyo Olympics the same year. Bianca Andreescu has spoken openly about anxiety and the difficulty of returning from injury.

Gauff sits inside that broader change. She has spoken candidly about pressure and performance before, particularly during a difficult stretch around Wimbledon and the US Open in 2024. What she said in Rome was different in that it pointed to something entirely outside the sport, something she is carrying into each match without the option of leaving it behind.

What Saturday’s final looks like

Gauff’s opponent in the final is Elina Svitolina, the seventh seed and a two-time Italian Open champion, having won the title in back-to-back years in 2017 and 2018. Svitolina arrives in the final having beaten both Elena Rybakina and Iga Swiatek, two of the four top seeds, in consecutive matches. She leads the head-to-head against Gauff 3-2, with both of her wins in 2026 coming on hard courts.

The clay surface in Rome may favor Gauff, who can become just the second American woman to win a WTA 1000 title on clay, following Serena Williams. Jim Courier, speaking on Tennis Channel ahead of the final, pointed to Gauff’s competitive resilience as something that sets her apart, describing her refusal to give in under pressure as a quality that is rare at any level. He identified her forehand as the shot that will determine how competitive she can be against Svitolina’s aggressive style.

Gauff enters the final with a record of 24 wins and 8 losses on the year. She is 11-4 in WTA finals overall and is seeking her fourth WTA 1000 title. Since winning Roland Garros last year, she has claimed just one title, making Saturday’s match an opportunity to reassert herself as a genuine contender heading into the French Open, which begins in two weeks.

Whatever she has been managing away from the court, the tennis has continued. That, she suggested, may be the whole point.

coco gauff Elina Svitolina italian open mental health in tennis Roland Garros Rome 2026 tennis final women's tennis wta WTA 1000
Gesi Lloyd

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