Coco Gauff needed only 54 minutes to reach the second round of Wimbledon on Monday, defeating Tamara Korpatsch 6-2, 6-1 in what stands as her fastest win ever at the grass-court major and brought an end to a four-match losing streak on the surface.
The victory marked Gauff’s first win on grass since the third round of the 2024 tournament, a gap that had created genuine questions about her comfort level on the surface heading into this year’s event. She won 88 percent of her first-serve points, her second-highest mark at the tournament behind only her 2024 win, and the three games she conceded tied for her fewest at Wimbledon in a single match.
A dominant opener that answered early questions
The efficiency of Gauff’s performance offered an encouraging early signal for a player whose grass-court results had lagged behind her form on other surfaces. Korpatsch struggled to find any rhythm against Gauff’s serve and movement, and the American closed out the match well within the hour, a rarity at any Grand Slam given the physical and tactical demands of best-of-three set tennis even in lopsided matches.
Gauff will face the winner of a second-round matchup between Solana Sierra and Anna Bondar. She holds a perfect record against Sierra in their previous meetings and has never faced Bondar, giving her a favorable history regardless of which opponent advances.
Sabalenka extends an extraordinary streak
World number one Aryna Sabalenka needed barely more time than Gauff to win her own opener, defeating Teodora Kostovic 6-2, 6-3 in 64 minutes, the second-fastest match of her Wimbledon career. The win extended her streak of consecutive first-round victories at major tournaments to 23, a run dating back to the 2020 US Open and trailing only the active streak held by the French Open champion among current players on tour.
Sabalenka’s last opening-round loss at a major came at the 2020 Australian Open. Her consistency at the start of Grand Slam events has become one of the most reliable patterns in the sport, and her next opponent already made history of her own on the same day. McCartney Kessler became the first unseeded woman to record a double-bagel win at Wimbledon in more than two decades, defeating her opponent without losing a single game across two sets. Sabalenka holds a win over Kessler from their only previous meeting at Indian Wells last year.
Other notable results from opening day
Naomi Osaka made a fashion statement with a flowing kimono for her on-court entrance before defeating Elsa Jacquemot 6-1, 7-5. French Open champion Mirra Andreeva continued her strong recent form with a 7-5, 6-4 win over Magda Linette, extending her momentum from her Roland Garros title into the grass-court season.
Not every seeded or notable player advanced. French Open finalist Maja Chwalinska, who required a wild-card entry into the Wimbledon main draw, was eliminated in three sets by Mananchaya Sawangkaew, a result that underscored how unpredictable the early rounds of a Grand Slam can be even for players who reached deep stages of a major just weeks earlier.
The opening day of women’s competition at Wimbledon produced a clear theme. The players at the top of the sport, Sabalenka chief among them, demonstrated the kind of consistency that has defined their dominance, while Gauff’s emphatic return to form on grass offered one of the most encouraging signs for her tournament prospects heading into the second week.

