Gauff beats Pegula in straight sets to win Wuhan Open

AFP
12 October 2025 | 13:34The third-seeded Gauff secured the trophy without dropping a set after a 1hr 42min battle in the central Chinese city.
Winner USA’s Coco Gauff poses with her trophy after winning against USA’s Jessica Pegula during an award ceremony for their women’s singles at the Wuhan Open tennis tournament in Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei province on October 12, 2025. Picture: ADEK BERRY / AFP.
WUHAN, CHINA - Coco Gauff overcame Jessica Pegula 6-4, 7-5 on Sunday to clinch the third WTA 1000 title of her career in an all-American final at the Wuhan Open.
The third-seeded Gauff secured the trophy without dropping a set after a 1hr 42min battle in the central Chinese city.
In the first final between the former doubles partners, Gauff erased multiple deficits in the second set to improve her head-to-head record against Pegula to 3-4.
The 21-year-old in the process became the first player in the Open Era to win her first nine hard-court finals.
The pair had contrasting routes to the final with Gauff breezing dropping a mere 16 games while Pegula battled through three-setters in all eight of her previous matches.
Gauff won the first six points of the match and it set the tone for what was to come, as she leapt to a 3-0 advantage.
Pegula recovered from her slow start and went on the attack in game seven, breaking with a fierce backhand winner that helped her get back on level terms at 4-4.
It looked like the sixth seed had swung he momentum her way but Gauff found a tiny opening two games later and broke to secure the opening set in 47 minutes.
Pegula had come back from 2-5 down in her deciding set against world number one Aryna Sabalenka the day before and was more than ready for another fightback.
Gauff has been reworking her serve with biomechanics specialist Gavin MacMillan since the end of August.
And while her numbers have improved since she added him to her team, the shot remains susceptible to ebbs and flows during stressful situations.
The world number three double-faulted six times, allowing Pegula to break her twice for a 3-0 lead, then steadied the ship by getting both breaks back to draw level.
There was another exchange of breaks, Pegula inching ahead with a cunning drop shot and Gauff pegging her back thanks to winning 10 consecutive points.
Shortly after, Gauff raised her arms in celebration as a Pegula volley sailed wide on match point.
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