(Reuters) – American teenager Coco Gauff crushed Italy’s Martina Trevisan 6-3 6-1 yesterday to become the youngest French Open finalist in 21 years and set up a showcase clash with world number one Iga Swiatek. The 18-year-old, who was already in unknown Grand Slam territory with her first semi-final spot, will next face Polish top seed Swiatek, who cruised into tomorrow’s final with a 6-2 6-1 demolition of Russian Daria Kasatkina to stretch her winning run to 34 matches.
“I am a little bit in shock right. I have no words to describe how I feel right now,” Gauff said in an on-court interview. “Honestly, I wasn’t nervous going in today which is a surprise.
“The only time I get a bit nervous is in the morning. I go for a walk and that clears my head.”
Gauff, who has yet to drop a set in the tournament and is the youngest finalist at any Grand Slam in 18 years, needed time to find her range, trading two early breaks each with Trevisan.
Once she found a way to neutralise the left-hander’s punishing forehand, however, Gauff breezed through the first set by winning the last three games.
“I had to be more patient,” Gauff said. “Being American I grew up hitting like this and hitting hard and I had to remind myself this is not the one to attack.
“I played her two years ago I and I lost against her and I know how difficult it is to play against her,” she said,
The 28-year-old Trevisan, bidding to become the lowest ranked finalist in the event’s history, took a medical break to strap up her right calf.
But things just got worse for her as she piled up 36 errors in total with Gauff stepping in to whip her backhands deep and moving her opponent around.
She also kept attacking her serve as the Italian managed only a low 46% win rate on her first delivery.
Ranked 23rd in the world, Gauff broke her again in a game lasting 14 minutes to go 3-1 up and never looked back, sealing her biggest career victory on her first match point.