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Coco Gauff makes history with dominant victory over Emma Raducanu to advance to Italian Open quarterfinals

Coco Gauff makes history with dominant victory over Emma Raducanu to advance to Italian Open quarterfinals

CNN13-05-2025
American tennis star Coco Gauff put on a dominant display as she eased past Emma Raducanu on Monday to book her spot in the Italian Open quarterfinals.
The No. 4 seed dropped just three games in her convincing 6-1, 6-2 win over her British opponent in Rome, needing just 79 minutes to secure victory.
In reaching the quarterfinals, the 21-year-old becomes the youngest player to reach four quarterfinals in WTA 1000 clay tournaments since the top-level events were introduced in 2009.
Gauff will face world No. 7 Mirra Andreeva in the final eight on Wednesday after the 18-year-old came back to beat Clara Tauson in three sets.
Gauff is showing impressive form on clay at the right time with the French Open just around the corner.
The American has won eight of her last nine matches on the surface, with her only loss coming in the final of the Madrid Open to world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka.
Gauff revealed after her victory over Raducanu that she has been focusing on her footwork over the last two weeks in preparation for playing at Roland Garros, and highlighted her forehand – which has been inconsistent of late – as a key factor in her win on Monday.
'I think, today, (it) was the reason why I won the match,' Gauff told reporters. 'Especially on this surface, I think I can do a lot with it.'
Gauff was in control from the outset against Raducanu on Campo Centrale and never let up. She won 39 of her 59 service points and broke Raducanu's serve four times.
She admitted that it has taken some time to get adjusted to playing on a different surface in Italy but feels good about where she is now.
'It still feels so slow compared to Madrid,' Gauff said, 'but I'm getting used to it with each match. I feel really happy with how I played. I think I really was the one dictating the match for the most part.'
Elsewhere on Monday, Sabalenka held of a stiff challenge from Ukraine's Marta Kostyuk to book her spot in the quarterfinals, winning 6-1, 7-6 (8) in two hours and five minutes.
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Hey, don't try this at home!#MilanoSanremo — Milano Sanremo (@Milano_Sanremo) March 19, 2022 'I think good descending needs to be subconscious, but built around the confidence of recent experience,' Mohorič explains. 'I see myself that I'm best when I ride a lot, when I do a lot at high speed, but in the winter when the roads are wet, I don't want to risk and push in training. To be honest, there's no real opportunity outside racing. 'In training, I'd never use the whole lane, not even my own lane. Especially on the right-handers, I would always exit completely on the right (to avoid cars), which is not at all what you'd do in a race, where you'd cut to the apex and go all the way out to the left. 'Some things are possible to practice at lower speed — like counter-steering, putting your weight over the tires and turning the handlebars the opposite direction. But in the fast corners of a race, you wouldn't use counter-steering, but you'd lean your body at high speed as well. 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Ultimately, many of Saiz's clients are dealing with fear — an emotion few professional cyclists admit to, but which nonetheless exists. It only inhibits performance. 'When you're young, you just go down, you don't think,' says Cancellara. 'But when you get older, you might start to have family responsibilities. Sometimes you go just a little bit less.' Cédrine Kerbaol is one of the best descenders in the women's peloton, becoming the first French rider to win a stage of the Tour de France Femmes after attacking down the Côte des Fins last summer. 'You have to be able to disconnect your brain and think about the moment,' she says. 'Because if you think about everything that could happen, or anything you could do in another way, then you get stuck in inaction. That's dangerous, because if you're scared of every corner or brake every time you see some small rocks, you are much more likely to crash at this point. Advertisement 'Of course you do need to think — but I think this takes place before the race, when I consider how much risk I want to take, what kind of risk. But if you think about it during the race, it's not easy. 'For me, it's sort of a game when I go down. It's the fun part, because my legs are not hurting. It's relaxing. I think you have fear when something happens — like if your wheel slips, you are scared for moment, for 10 seconds, and then you forget about it.' More than many riders in the peloton, Mohorič knows the stakes of descending. In 2023, his Bahrain Victorious teammate Gino Mader died after a high-speed crash at the Tour de Suisse. Did that experience, or his own crash in the 2021 Giro d'Italia, change his relationship with the discipline? 'Not at all actually,' he says. 'But I have huge respect for it, especially with the speed. To be honest, I don't really enjoy the descents with lots of speed, because the consequences can be really bad without any gear or protection which you wouldn't use in races. The higher the speed, the less risk I would take.' Like nutrition, equipment, and tactics, in recent years, descending has changed along with the rest of cycling. Bike computers are one major change, but many of the peloton don't like using them when going downhill. 'For me, it's much safer not to look on the map or study in advance,' says Mohorič. 'OK, maybe if I'm really on it and want to do everything perfectly, then I would look at VeloViewer the night before to see if there were any particular corners where I needed to take care. Ones where you think you can see the apex and the exit, but then they close and get tighter once more. 'I think I'm fastest when I just stay in the moment, looking as far up the road as I can — using the normal technique of spotting the apex and committing. Then, once I can see the exit, I can let go of all the brakes and start to reaccelerate. I think this is safest too — if you're always looking down at your Garmin, you might have a lapse of focus, you might miss your braking point, or a road you thought was straight might actually end up having a kink. That can all be really dangerous.' Advertisement Romain Bardet once said that he felt more unsafe riding the roads he knew well, a sentiment that Saiz agrees with. 'When you know it like the back of your hand, the problem then is that you'll be thinking more than you need to,' he explains. 'You need to be a bit like an Alpine skier. They don't think, they just look at the post, boom! Look at the post, boom! One by one.' Another element is the bicycle itself. Cyclists will do anything to find grip — Nibali used to always ensure his tires were pre-used, scrubbing away the slippier outer layer, but found the shift from rim brakes to disc brakes to be challenging. Feeling is everything — and it all but changed overnight. 'It's important to have the sensation through your hands, your body, because it allows you to feel the asphalt,' says Nibali. 'Where it's slippier, where there's more grip. With rim brakes, I could feel slightly more — the disc brakes filter much more of sensation of the asphalt. The bike now is much faster, because they have more grip, but they are trickier too.' 'You know, these modern bikes are actually very difficult to actually ride, descending or cornering, because of the geometry and how they're built,' agrees Saiz. 'First they changed the weight, then the stability, then the aerodynamics. I've never seen a bike which advertises itself as helping you with handling. That's not a slogan that sells. But there are some that say they can make you 10kph quicker. So many of them aren't forgiving. If you make a mistake, you're probably going to have consequences.' For many, cycling's relationship with descending is too fast and too loose. They point to downhill finishes, in which riders hoping to win the race are incentivized to take risks in exchange for their safety. 'I think they should take them (downhill finishes) away,' Matteo Jorgenson said ahead of the 2023 Tour. 'We saw what happened a few weeks ago on one (when Mader died). It's a part of cycling, but one life lost is too much. Advertisement 'We're all willing to take risks to win the race. If the route is planned that way, it puts us all in a bit of danger. We're bike racers, and when you put a finish line at the bottom, we're going to go as fast as we possibly can. I would prefer to finish on top of the climb.' His comments were echoed by many in the peloton. Mohorič has both won on these downhill finishes and experienced loss from their risks. He believes that as long as the course is designed carefully, the inherent risk can be minimized, even if it will never disappear completely. 'I still think downhill finishes have their place in cycling,' he says. 'I don't think it should be done every day, but it would also be a little bit boring if every day was a mountain-top finish. The same guys would end up winning, no? 'I know it must be frustrating for some guys that are strong to then struggle with the descents or positioning, but there's more to cycling than just watts per kilo. I think cycling is beautiful and nice to watch because it has a bit of everything.'

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