ROME – Coco Gouf reached her first final at the opening of Zheng Qinwen and The The The The The The The Italian Open on Thursday in Rome.
In a match where wild momentum was marked shaking, Goff fought past Zheng for three and a half hours in the semi-finals of the 7-6 (3), 4-6, 7-6 (4) marathon.
She moves forward to face Jasmine Paolini. He became the first Italian woman in over a decade to reach the final in her home tournament when she defeated American Payton Stearns 7-5, 6-1 in the other semi-finals.
Gauff allowed a 5-3 lead slip in the opener, but took advantage of Zheng’s double fault and featured 35 forced errors from both players.
Zheng fought back on his second early break and forced the decider, but after not playing in the match, the Olympic champion faded in the final tiebreak.
The Americans defended her nerves to book their second WTA 1000 final after finishing runner-up in Madrid.
Parini, the world’s fifth-ranked player, found Diana Schneider a 4-0 set in the quarter-final match before raiding on victory, and got off to a late start with the opening set before fitting a comeback again.
“I’m so happy, I don’t know what to say,” said Parini, the first Italian to make it to the finals in Rome in 2014 after his doubles partner Sara Ellani lost to Serena Williams.
Paolini’s hopes for a quick start rested as Stearns jumped into a 3-0 lead amid applause from the home crowd, and the Italians quickly went 4-1.
Stearns looked comfortable and poised to film the opening set, Paolini leveled up the set point 5-5 and pumped his fist with a cries of victory that roared the crowd again, causing Paolini to save his set point and fry his fist.
The comeback is complete. Paolini won four games in a row, winning the opening set after over an hour of play.
The momentum was solid with Paolini, so she broke Stearns for the fifth time to go 4-1 in the second set, and there was no answer as the Italian winner passed her.
Stearns fired a forehand at matchpoint as the crowd erupted and Paolini raised his arm to celebrate.
“Today was a bit of a difficult start so you gave me a boost and I struggled first,” Parini told the crowd. “I am grateful that you were there.
“We won this match together. After the points, I was able to fight it. Even if I didn’t feel good at first, we turned it around. But I’m happy with how to turn this match around.”
On the men’s side, the world’s number one Janik Thinner put a ruthless display in the evening session and dismantled Madrid’s newly crowned open champion, Casper Rood, 6-1 in the quarter-finals.
Thinner only dropped seven points in the opening set, but won eight games in a row before Rude got on the board.
Rude raised his arms in a mock celebration when he finally won the game amid cheers from home fans, but the sinner was not hanging out as he finished the match in 63 minutes to reach his first semi-final in Rome.
“I felt good in court today,” Sinner said. “I think we all saw that. My goal was to understand where the level of this tournament was here. It rose daily, so I’m very pleased about it.
“It’s not really important, but what I felt today was a very positive sign for me… I think everything went very well today.
Overall, Thinner scored 55 points out of 77 points, earning 22 winners for Ruud’s Seven, and only 10 forced errors for Ruud’s 17.
“What I witnessed was perfect,” Rood said. “It’s very impressive. …It was always like playing a wall shooting a 100 mph ball at you.”
The sinner will then be the fourth American in an open era to reach back-to-back semi-finals in Rome, beating Hubert Halkach 7-6 (4), 6-3. Others were Eddie Dibbs (1978-79), Jim Courier (1992-93), and Pete Sampras (1993-94).
Paul also beat Harukachi in the quarterfinals last year, but was then beaten by Nicholas Jarry in the semifinals.
The other men’s semi-finals pit Italian Lorenzo Musetti against Spanish third seed Carlos Alcalaz.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to the report.