Coco Gauff walked off Center Court in Dubai on Tuesday, February 17, with exactly what she needed — not a masterpiece, but a win. The American third seed defeated Anna Kalinskaya 6-4, 6-4 in the second round of the 2026 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, ending a two-match losing streak and giving herself a long-overdue confidence boost in a part of the season that has historically been unkind to her.
The victory was far from clean. Gauff herself described the performance as not the prettiest match, and the numbers backed her up — 12 double faults, a first-serve percentage hovering around 57%, and enough unforced errors to make any coaching staff wince. But she did what champions do when the clean tennis refuses to come — she competed, she defended, and she broke when it mattered most.
Gauff Rallied From Behind Twice to Take Control
The match followed a near-identical script in both sets. Kalinskaya, buoyed by a first-round win over Jelena Ostapenko and a quarterfinal showing the previous week in Doha, came out sharp and aggressive. She broke early in the first set to lead 2-0, and then again in the second to go up 3-1 — each time looking like she might be on the verge of a repeat of their only prior meeting, a three-set Kalinskaya victory at this same event in 2024.
Gauff refused to fold. In the first set, Coco strung together four consecutive games to flip a 0-2 deficit into a 4-2 lead, converting break points in the fourth, sixth, and eventually the tenth game when Kalinskaya was serving to stay in the set. In the second, the American ran off three straight games from 1-3 down to go 4-3 up, and then broke again at 5-4 to close out the match. The pattern was the same both times — Gauff absorbed the early pressure, steadied her return game, and struck when her opponent blinked.
A medical timeout midway through the first set, when Kalinskaya received treatment on her left leg while trailing 4-3, may have disrupted her rhythm. She continued competing but her movement appeared affected in the closing stages.
Gauff Has Openly Struggled in the Middle East
This win carried extra weight because of where it happened. The Middle East swing — back-to-back WTA 1000 events in Doha and Dubai packed tightly after the Australian Open — has been a recurring trouble spot. She lost her opening match in Doha in each of her last three appearances in Qatar, and exited Dubai after just one match last year. She arrived this week off the back of a quarterfinal loss to Elina Svitolina in Doha and a second-round defeat to Elisabetta Cocciaretto that raised real questions about her hard-court form.
Gauff has spoken candidly about why this stretch is so hard for top players — the exhaustion of a month in Australia, flying home, then having to leave again and re-adjust to a completely different environment. She also flagged that the courts in Dubai play noticeably faster than in Doha, adding another layer of difficulty for players still finding their rhythm. Those concerns felt legitimate arriving in Dubai. They feel less urgent now.
The Stats Behind a Gritty Gauff Performance
For all the messiness, the numbers still told a story of a player who competed when it counted. The American converted 60% of her break points in the first set and an impressive 75% in the second, closing out the match on her own terms despite 12 double faults and a first-serve percentage sitting around 57%. She won the first set by taking 30 of 55 total points — enough to get the job done.
Kalinskaya had her own opportunities and converted at a solid rate, but she could not hold when it mattered most — a familiar story for a player who has struggled against elite opposition despite otherwise strong results this season.
Gauff Eyes Mertens as Dubai Run Continues
With the win, Coco Gauff moves into the third round — the Round of 16 — where she will face Belgian veteran Elise Mertens. The two have met five times before, with the American holding a 4-1 head-to-head edge, including a commanding 6-0, 6-2 win in the fourth round at Indian Wells in 2024. A victory there would push her into the quarterfinals, which would match her best ever result at this tournament.
The draw has also opened up with top seeds Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek both having withdrawn from the tournament. For Gauff, who took her last title at Wuhan in October 2025, the timing of this win feels important. She was clear that she is not ready to start predicting a deep run — this part of the season has burned her before — but she is taking the positives. The fighting spirit that carried her through two deficits against Kalinskaya is exactly the kind of form that wins titles, even when the tennis is not yet where she wants it to be.

