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Coco Gauff wants to win a Grand Slam in 2023

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Coco Gauff, who shot to fame by reaching the Wimbledon last 16 as a 15-year-old in 2019 said that her main ambition for 2023 was winning a Grand Slam title. “Starting another season as an established pro feels pretty weird. I’m still only 18 but I don’t feel like the new kid any more,” the American said in her sports column for BBC yesterday. Following is Gauff’s column which appeared yesterday.

I feel I’m ready to leave behind the tag of ‘teenage phenomenon’. Now it is time to be known as a Grand Slam champion. I feel like all the players still call me a baby, and usually, I’m still one of the youngest in the draw, but I’ve been around for a while.

My main ambition for 2023 is winning a Grand Slam title. That’s the biggest goal. It is something I have chased for my whole life and I came so close last year by reaching the French Open final. If winning a major doesn’t happen this year, I will continue to chase this dream.

Last season was great for me. I broke into the top five of the world rankings in both the singles and doubles, as well as reaching both finals at Roland Garros. Even though I lost in the singles to Iga Swiatek, it gave me a lot of confidence in my game and myself.

I know I can win a Grand Slam title. Now it is about making the final step. I just need to fine-tune some details and I worked hard in pre-season to do that. I really think that I had probably one of the best off-seasons I have had. It was a lot of hard work, a lot of long days. But I’ve improved my game a lot.

One of my other goals was to win a WTA Tour title – I didn’t do that last year – and I have already that checked off by winning in Auckland last week. The signs are good and hopefully this success continues throughout the season. In the moments after I lost to Iga at Roland Garros, I hid beneath my towel and cried.

When you’re in a match, you don’t feel it is over until it is over. Then all the emotion hits you. Although I was losing for the majority of the time in the match, I still felt I had a chance until the end. Actually, it was almost a relief when it was over.

There was a lot of pressure building up to that and I was the most nervous I have been for a match in my life. Everybody says you don’t know how you’re going to feel in a Grand Slam final unless you experience it. All the other players who said that are completely right.

No matter how many finals you play at other tournaments, there is no amount of preparation you can do for that feeling of being in a major final. You can’t replicate it. It is every tennis player’s dream to win a Grand Slam and I guess when you realise how close your dream is, it brings a lot of emotions.

One person who knows this experience is Mary Joe Fernandez. She played three Grand Slam finals – including two here in Melbourne – and I’ve spoken a lot to her about how she felt. She was telling me she regretted that everyone was telling her before the first final ‘oh, you’re young and you will play in plenty more finals’.

Instead, she told me to play every one like it is my last. It was great advice. You have to presume you won’t get that experience again and that is the right thing to tell someone. You don’t know where life will take you.

I don’t know if I will play another Grand Slam final or not. I certainly hope so.But Mary Joe’s advice changed my perception on the experience and I hope I do make another one so I can take her words and do something with it.

A lot of BBC Sport readers will remember how I burst onto the scene at Wimbledon in 2019 – it was a crazy, crazy tournament, but I really enjoyed what happened. I didn’t realise how big a deal it was until maybe a year later because I was just living my life in the moment. Because I was so young and fresh on the scene, I also had no idea what players should look like going on to the tour as a 15-year-old.

Obviously it is not standard to reach the fourth round of a Grand Slam! It is usually a slower progression. When I think back and reflect on that time, it was like living in a movie. It went by so fast. It felt like a dream – one where you can’t tell if it was real or not – and like it didn’t happen in real life.

Having that success at such a young age created a lot of pressure – but it was good pressure. People were saying good things about me, wanting me to do good things. Now I hope I can live up to that by having success at the Grand Slams in 2023.



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Lutkenhaus, 17, upsets Olympic champion Wanyonyi in Oslo

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Wanyonyi (left) finished behind Lutkenhaus (right) in Oslo [BBC]

American teenager Cooper Lutkenhaus produced a stunning performance to hold off Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi in the men’s 800m at the Diamond League meeting in Norway.

The 17-year-old crossed the line in a personal best of one minute and 42.08 seconds to edge out the Kenyan by one hundredth of a second in Oslo, despite Wanyonyi recording his fastest time of the season (1:42.09).

Lutkenhaus was unbeaten in his five previous 800m finals this year, having claimed gold at the World Indoor Championships and become the Diamond League’s youngest ever winner on his debut in Stockholm last weekend.

“This boy [Lutkenhaus] is in a good shape,” said the 21-year-old Wanyonyi, who missed the event in Sweden following the birth of his first child.

“Can you believe that as an Olympic champion, you are trying to knock down a 17-year-old boy?

“I started the race in front and after 600m to go, I tried to see who is coming to push me. Then I saw him passing me so then I tried to respond. But my target today was to run my season best, to improve.”

British sprinter Amy Hunt placed second in the women’s 100m in 10.99 seconds, with St Lucia’s Olympic champion Julien Alfred taking victory in a time of 10.76.

Amber Anning was fourth in the women’s 400m as Norway’s Henriette Jaeger enjoyed success, while her fellow Briton, Jake Wightman, finished fifth in the Dream Mile behind Kenya’s Timothy Cheruiyot.

There was Ethiopian dominance in the women’s 3,000m race, with Freweyni Hailu, Likina Amebaw, Senayet Getachew and Hawi Abera occupying the top four positions.

Hailu recorded the fastest time in the world this year, crossing the line in 8:24.22, while GB pair Megan Keith and Innes Fitzgerald finished seventh and ninth respectively.

In the final event of the evening, home favourite Karsten Warholm’s time of 47.40 was only enough to earn the Swede second place behind Brazilian rival Alison dos Santos (46.89) in the men’s 400m hurdles.

[BBC Sports]

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From UAE heartbreak to fresh hope in England

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Sri Lanka’s fortunes depend heavily on their captain Chamari Atapattu. She’s seen taking part in religious observances prior to the team’s departure to the UK last week.

Sri Lanka will open their ICC Women’s T20 World Cup campaign against hosts England when the 12-nation tournament gets underway in Birmingham on Friday. The event carries a prize purse of USD 8.7 million, underlining the remarkable growth of the women’s game in recent years.

Every participating team is guaranteed a minimum of USD 250,000, even if they fail to win a game during the group stage.

Sri Lanka have been drawn in Group A alongside hosts England, defending champions New Zealand, Ireland, Scotland and West Indies. The top two teams qualify for the semi-finals.

The islanders endured a miserable campaign at the previous Women’s T20 World Cup in the UAE, losing all four of their group games. More concerning than the defeats themselves were the margins of those losses. Since then, however, the side has made significant progress and, under new Head Coach Jamie Siddons, there is a renewed sense of belief within the camp.

Sri Lanka arrived in Birmingham after comprehensive warm-up victories over Pakistan and the Netherlands in Derby. The team was scheduled to train under lights at Edgbaston on Wednesday evening as preparations entered the final phase.

Having qualified for the tournament by virtue of their international ranking, Sri Lanka will be quietly confident of giving a good account of themselves.

Following the opening game in Birmingham, they will travel to Southampton, Bristol and Manchester for the remainder of the group stage. A trip to London will materialise only if they progress to the knockout rounds.

Since the last World Cup, Sri Lanka have played a considerable amount of bilateral cricket and also underwent an intensive residential camp in Pallekele in the lead-up to the tournament.

Several exciting young players have emerged over the last year, adding fresh energy to the side and raising expectations. The biggest challenge, however, will be adapting to English conditions.

Australia remain the most successful team in the tournament’s history, having lifted the trophy six times. England, West Indies and New Zealand have each won the title once.

Rex Clementine in Birmingham

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Gaikwad 101 trumps Arachchige 74 as India A win thriller against Sri Lanka A

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Sahan Arachchige's 74 was not enough as Sri Lanka A collapsed in the chase [SLC]

India A began their tour of Sri Lanka with a nervy eight run win against the hosts in Dambulla. A series that has been given the added edge by the presence of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi opened under hot weather on a two-paced surface. The stroke-making on the pitch was anything but easy. Here’s a look back at the match which India A eventually snatched from the jaws of defeat.

There had been a frenzy around him ever since he arrived in Sri Lanka three days ago. Fans, officials and media alike clamoured for a glimpse of him. Their first sighting of the 15-year-old in action was brief. Yet, it offered a tantalising glimpse of what they could expect.

After Prabhsimran Singh played out a first-over maiden, Sooryavanshi got off the mark with a boundary off his very first ball – a slap over the infield. Three fours followed in a 12-ball knock that yielded 14 runs. His innings ended in the fourth over when an attempted loft off seamer Mohamed Shiraz flew flat to mid-off, where captain Sahan Arachchige pulled off a superb diving catch.

Sooryavanshi has three more group games, followed by a final if India A qualify, to make amends before he flies to Ireland. There, he will link up with the senior Indian team for the T20I series.

Rutrraj Gaikwad wasn’t even in the original squad, but a hamstring injury to Riyan Parag earned him a late call-up to Sri Lanka, and unexpectedly, the vice-captaincy. On Tuesday, he made the most of that opportunity, showing he could thrive in the No. 4 role in one-day cricket with a measured 114-ball 101 that anchored India A’s 277.

It was another reminder of Gaikwad’s pedigree in the format. His only ODI century for India came in his most recent appearance, against South Africa in December 2025, when he shared a 195-run stand with Virat Kohli in Raipur. However, this innings was different.

On a slow surface where Sri Lanka A’s spinners controlled much of the middle overs, Gaikwad prioritised strike rotation over boundary-hitting. He struck just six fours and three sixes, yet dominated a 150-run fourth-wicket partnership with captain Tilak Varma.

Gaikwad was reprieved on 49, when Niroshan Dickwella missed a straightforward stumping opportunity off legspinner Vijaykanth Viyaskanth. Gaikwad kicked his innings into high gear thereafter by hitting the next ball, a full toss, for six over deep midwicket to bring up his half-century.

The hundred brought a unique record: it was his 21st List A century, achieved in just his 96th match, making him the fastest player to reach the mark. Pakistan’s Khurram Manzoor, the previous quickest, needed 130 matches.

India’s search for a seam-bowling allrounder beyond Hardik Pandya has largely centred on Nitish Kumar Reddy and Shivam Dube. But there is growing promise in Suryansh Shedge. The Mumbai allrounder provided the finishing touches to India A’s innings with an unbeaten 26 off 14 balls.

Then, with the ball, Shedge extracted appreciable seam movement and bounce in a lively opening spell, troubling Sri Lanka A’s batters despite finishing wicketless with 8-0-41-0. If he can bowl as consistently as he did here, he will continue to strengthen his case after a solid IPL 2026.

Anukul Roy, meanwhile, showed why he remains a highly-rated spin option. The left-arm spinner returned 2 for 49 from his ten overs, but the figures only partly reflected his impact. He broke an 86-run stand by enticing Sadeera Samarawickrama into a mistimed loft to long-on, before dismissing Ravindu Fernando caught and bowled off a leading edge in his next over. Those strikes led Sri Lanka A from cruise control to full-blown turbulence. They were eventually bowled out for 269 in the 49th over.

SCORES:

INDIA A

277/6 in 50 overs [Priyansh Arya 32, Rutraj Gaikwad 101, Tilak Varma 60; Mohamed Shiraz 2-67] beat SRI LANKA A 269 in 48.5 overs [Niroshan Dickwella 47, Avishka Fernando 45, Sadeera Samarawickrama 46, Sahan Arachchige 74; Arshad Khan 2-24, Anukul Roy 2-49, Ayush Badoni 2-46, Vipraj Nigam 2-46] by 8 runs

 

Ruturaj Gaikwad brought up his 21st List A century in Dambulla [SLC]

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