Iga Swiatek Roland Garros Daria Kasatkina Venus Williams France Poland tennis Air on as Iga Swiatek Roland Garros Daria Kasatkina Venus Williams France Poland

Uncertainty in the air as Swiatek takes on teenager Gauff in French Open final

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PARIS : Iga Swiatek is one step away from a second French Open title in three years but the world number one will face a unique challenge on Saturday in teenager Coco Gauff in a tournament that often proved unpredictable.Poland's Swiatek is on a remarkable 34-match winning streak and should the 2020 Roland Garros champion lift the Suzanne Leglen Cup again, she will match Venus Williams's run from 2000 - the longest on the women' tour in the 2000s.Her final record is also impressive as the 21-year-old has won the last eight finals she has played, losing more than four games only twice in those matches.She has a unique game, with her light footwork, powerful forehand and unsettling slice proving a nightmare to handle as her opponents during this fortnight have realised.Swiatek has only dropped one set and showed occasional signs of nerves before steamrolling Daria Kasatkina in the semi-finals in an awe-inspiring demonstration of mastery.Nerves have often been a deciding factor in finals but there is little chance that Swiatek, who has been working with a psychologist, will struggle with her composure."I'm just trying to treat these (final) matches as any other matches, because it is stressful, and I accept that.

But I want to keep doing the same work," she said."It's been going on well. I'm also aware sometimes my opponents are stressed so I'm trying to kind of realise that and not panic about my own stress."Remembering why I got here and what my strengths are, this is really helping me.

So I think it's all about the mindset and the preparation I have before the match."On the other side of the net is an 18-year-old who has developed into a solid claycourt player and will play her second final here after winning the juniors

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Coco Gauff wept in her courtside chair, cried on the trophy podium and sobbed again in the press room as the US teenager admitted her French Open final defeat Saturday was a "lot to handle". Gauff, 18, and the youngest finalist at a major since Maria Sharapova at Wimbledon in 2004, was swept off court by world number one Iga Swiatek 6-1, 6-3 in just 68 minutes. After a tournament which had seen her celebrate her high school graduation and then win widespread praise for an impassioned plea to end gun violence in the United States, defeat to the Pole was a bitter end.
Iga Swiatek cemented her place at the top of women's tennis with a commanding victory over Coco Gauff in the final of the French Open.
Twenty months ago, an unheralded Iga Swiatek became the lowest-ranked woman to win the French Open. Today, Swiatek won her second French Open as the world’s most dominant tennis player in years, and perhaps for years to come.

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