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Reading: 2026 Wimbledon Tuesday candidates: Americans Pegula and Gauff know each other’s game well
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Sports Daily > Tennis > 2026 Wimbledon Tuesday candidates: Americans Pegula and Gauff know each other’s game well
2026 Wimbledon Tuesday candidates: Americans Pegula and Gauff know each other's game well
Tennis

2026 Wimbledon Tuesday candidates: Americans Pegula and Gauff know each other’s game well

July 6, 2026 7 Min Read
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Tuesday is shaping up to be a great day for tennis at Wimbledon, with the men’s and women’s quarter-final matches taking place. There are some interesting matchups, but one matchup between the U.S. women is clearly in a class of its own. It’s No. 4 seed Jessica Pegula versus No. 7 Coco Gauff. The two have been doubles partners many times over the years, including at the 2024 Olympics. As of this publication, no official start time has been set, but it will likely be fairly early Eastern Standard Time.

Pegula and Gauff are the two highest-seeded women remaining in the field, marking the first Wimbledon match between the top 10 U.S. women’s seeds since the 2009 final between sisters Serena and Venus Williams.

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  • Pegula-Gauff over 20.5 games total (-165)
  • Osaka-Muchova with tiebreak (+140)

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The 32-year-old Buffalo native, whose parents own the NFL’s Bills and NHL’s Sabers, advanced to the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the first time since 2023 with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 victory over fellow American Iva Jovic, wearing No. 16, on Sunday. It was the only time she made it past the third round before this year.

Pegula also reached the semi-finals of the Australian Open this year, but his bid for his first Grand Slam title stalled in round one of the French Open, leaving him just 400 points away from winning it. Pegula has defeated Jovic twice so far this season, both times on different surfaces than grass, and went on to win both events.

See also  2025 Wimbledon: Tournament Schedule and How to Watch on ESPN

Gauff, 22, from Delray Beach, Florida, will win her first singles title in 2026 and earn +1000 to win her third tournament after Roland Garros in 2025 and the US Open in 2023. Gauff advanced on Sunday with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory over No. 11 ranked Belinda Bencic.

Gauff almost had to fly home early Monday morning to finish the match, but was able to grab her first match point at 10:58 p.m. local time, two minutes before the All England Club’s 11 p.m. curfew. Gauff found the net 13 times in the final set, scoring 11 of those points, compared to only six times in the first set. Pegula knows his game well, so will he be that aggressive today?

This is Gauff’s first time reaching the Wimbledon quarterfinals. It was her third three-set win of the tournament, and the third time she won after dropping the first set at Wimbledon. Gauff is the youngest American to reach the quarters since Serena in 2001.

This is the ninth time the two have met, with Pegula leading 5-3. Their most recent meeting was at the WTA Finals on hard courts in Saudi Arabia last year, with Pegula winning in three sets. The last grass meeting took place in Berlin in 2024, with Pegula winning in straight sets. They have never played at Wimbledon. Pegula is -173 popular.

“This will be my third flat hit in a row,” Gauff told reporters after her win. “The last two games have definitely prepared me for her.”

See also  Wimbledon 2025 results, takeout: Giannik Thinner will outclass American Ben Shelton to reach the semi-finals

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The winner will face 14th place Naomi Osaka (Japan) or 10th place Karolina Muchova (Czech Republic) in the semifinals, with Osaka being the -157 favorite and +240 favorite to win the tournament. Osaka defeated world No. 1 and defending champion Aryna Sabalenka 6-2, 7-6 (2) on Sunday to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals for the first time.

Osaka is 0-3 against Sabalenka this year, having suffered eight consecutive losses since the 2018 US Open. Sabalenka’s run of 14 consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances has apparently come to an end. It was the first time she lost in straight sets at a major tournament since the 2020 US Open. She has won 21 straight majors, even in tiebreaks, the longest such streak in the Open era.

The 28-year-old Osaka, a four-time major champion, had never beaten a top-10 player in a non-hard court event, going 0-13. She is the third Japanese woman to reach the Wimbledon singles quarterfinals in the Open era, following Kimiko Date (1995 and 1996) and Ai Sugiyama (2004). Neither will win. Again, no Japanese player has won the title. Osaka is already one of the most popular athletes across Japan, and making history for this country at Wimbledon will only increase her popularity.

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“I haven’t had this much fun on court in a long time. It really means a lot to be able to do it here,” Osaka said on court. “It’s grass, so I just tried to hit my serve well. I also tried to get an advantage in rallies.” She has only lost one set on grass this season.

See also  Serena Williams returns to singles at Wimbledon, teams with Venus in doubles

Muchova, 29, defeated 2024 Wimbledon champion Barbora Krecikova 7-5, 5-7, 6-3 to secure the 10th women’s title in the last 10 Wimbledons. This is already the longest record in tournament history. No woman has won multiple Wimbledon titles since Serena won her seventh title in 2016.

Osaka and Muchova have fought six times in their career, and they had just met in a grass-court preliminary match in Germany, with Muchova leading 6-1, 1-0 when Osaka retired. Muchova is aiming for her first Grand Slam title and will cost +650 to win it.

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