Coco Gauff's best Madison key returns to France Open Semi-finals

Coco Gauff overcame 10 double breakdowns, and she fell into the first set at the French Open, beating Madison Keys 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-1 for the third semi-final.

The game was full of mistakes from two Americans, each of whom won a major championship. They encountered 101 uncompulsory mistakes under Philippe-Chatrier's enclosed roof, under more than two roofs on a furry, cold day, under more than two roofs, and made only 40 winners in more than two hours.

"I just want to fight for every point," Goff said.

No. 2 seed Gauff won the 2023 U.S. Open and finished second in the 2022 French Open, to face the title of No. 6 Mirra Andreeva in the semifinals on Thursday with 361 French wild card Lois Boisson. Gauff was 4-0 in his career against Andreeva, including two wins in 2025 and never faced Boisson.

"I still have a lot of work to do," Goff said.

She started off particularly poorly with the Keys, trailing 4-1, which was the score of the 5-1 deficit. Gaofu sighed after lowering his head or sighing. Then suddenly she left, using her speed and intuition to stretch the points until the Australian Open Championship Key in January - Missed.

This helps Gauff to get the setting to some extent. But the Florida-based 21-year-old has a three-time double in the finals and will soon be heading to the locker room to reorganize.

The first group is sloppy. Gauff had 7 winners, reaching 21 unmandatory errors. Keys had 12 winners to 28 unmandatory mistakes, 19 of which arrived from her powerful forehand.

"I knew I just needed to run today and it was a short ball, so I punished her for it," Goff said.

Once again, Gauff scrambles to the fore in this way, or lets her racket shoot out of the keys, and many other players will end the point. Usually, it works well, leading to the missed keys, and they occasionally slapped the right leg.

“With her ability to cover up the court, you’re going to have to win this many times before it can really end,” Case said.

Gauff lost his first set and won his second set and is now at 4-0 in his French Open career. ESPN Research said this closely links her to Elina Svitolina.

She has also become the youngest woman since Martina Hingis (1995-2000), winning 25 major raffle draws on Roland Garros.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.