
Imago
Image Credits: Imago

Imago
Image Credits: Imago
Earlier this season, Coco Gauff endured a tough 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 loss to Belinda Bencic in the fourth round of the BNP Paribas Open 2024 at Indian Wells. The sting of the defeat may have lingered, but she answered back weeks later on the clay of the Mutua Madrid Open 2024. She defeated the Swiss 6-4, 6-4 in a largely uneventful match to level their head-to-head for the year. Now Diamond Court pitted them against each other for the China Open 2025. Gauff, the defending champion, won again, but not without a heated exchange with her opponent.
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After Bencic snatched the first set in the R16 against Gauff, the second set saw unexpected drama. Just when the score reached 2-3, the Swiss pro clashed with Gauff’s team as she prepared to serve down break point. On the previous rally, Bencic had thrown in a poor drop shot that Gauff punished with a winner, prompting loud celebrations from the American’s box. Irritated, Bencic told them to “shut up,” insisting they should not be cheering “before I serve” and even likened the situation to “under-12s” tennis.
To this, Gauff fired back, “I treat your team with respect, you treat my team with respect,” clarifying that her camp had not interrupted her opponent’s serve. But Bencic’s frustration carried over as she pressed the point, “No one’s talking to you. She’s talking to me, OK! Your team is chanting! I’m too old for these mind games, OK!”
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She didn’t let the matter drop, adding that cheering was fine once the point ended but not when she was stepping up to serve. The tension spilled over into the next changeover, with Bencic venting to the chair umpire as Gauff interjected again.
bit of a tense moment at 2-3 in the 2nd set of Gauff-Bencic.
Belinda appeared frustrated with someone in the crowd cheering a Gauff winner to which Coco said, "There's nobody in the stadium. It's been so respectful." Belinda replied, "They can cheer after the point." pic.twitter.com/ERO55t4f9o
— Christian's Court (@christianscourt) September 30, 2025
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Following this verbal sparring, the match turned personal in intensity. After Bencic had edged the first set, Gauff steadied herself despite a shaky stretch of three double faults in the very next game. “Immediately after that, next game I was frustrated, threw three doubles,” she admitted later. “But after that I was just like, ‘OK, I don’t want to lose anymore after this point.’ I think I can sometimes play better when I’m annoyed, more so not with myself but with something else.”
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Her focus showed. Gauff clawed her way back, breaking Bencic and eventually forcing a tiebreak. There, she held her nerve to push the match into a decider.
By the end of the marathon 2-hour-29-minute battle, it was Gauff who ultimately emerged with the upper hand over the 28-year-old. After finding her rhythm in the second set, she surged through the third, sealing a 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-2 win. The handshake at the net was respectful, with Gauff later saying there were no hard feelings. “She’s entitled to how she felt, and I’m entitled to how I respond,” the American reflected. “I obviously have a lot of respect for Belinda. She’s a great player, coming back and playing great tennis as a mom. Yeah, I obviously wish today didn’t happen, but it is what it is.”
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Coco Gauff locks her spot in the WTA Finals
It was Coco Gauff’s fourth overall and second-straight victory against Belinda Bencic after taking her down in Madrid a few months ago. The two-time slam winner has now entered the quarterfinal stage at the China Open.
With the fourth-round win in Beijing on Tuesday, Gauff has also qualified for the WTA Finals in Riyadh. Last season, she was the winner there after besting Qinwen Zheng in the final. This time, too, the 21-year-old will look to repeat the milestone.
But before that, she will try to reclaim her crown at the China Open. The world No.3 will now take on Eva Lys, who emerged as the eventual winner in her R16 clash against McCartney Kessler.
Since her Roland Garros triumph back in June, Gauff has failed to leave any lasting impact on the court. At Wimbledon, she was ousted in the first round by Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska. Then at the Canadian Open, local star and teenage sensation Victoria Mboko bested her in the fourth round. Even in Cincinnati, the American star couldn’t move past the QF stage against Jasmine Paolini.
At the US Open, too, the situation remained unchanged as the winner of the 2023 edition failed to make a deep run. Four-time slam champion Naomi Osaka beat her in the fourth round in straight sets. Looking forward, however, Gauff will try to wrap up the season on a winning note, beginning with the China Open. Can she really leave her recent setbacks behind and defend her title run in Beijing this week? Only time will tell.
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