DUNYA NEWS
Live
Sports

Gauff battles through illness to reach last 16 at Madrid Open tennis

Updated on:

Gauff rallied from a set down ‌despite battling what appears to be a bug affecting several players, with the American admitting she was "trying not to throw up on the court" during the match

(Reuters) – World number three Coco Gauff fought off more than just her opponent at the Madrid Open on Sunday, overcoming illness and vomiting to beat Sorana Cirstea 4-6 ​7-5 6-1 and advance to the last 16.

Gauff rallied from a set down ‌despite battling what appears to be a bug affecting several players at the tournament, with the American admitting she was "trying not to throw up on the court" during the match.

Gauff did end up ​throwing up on court midway through the second set, which she described as 'embarrassing', ​before the 22-year-old recovered from a break down in the second set ⁠and then dominated the decider.

"Honestly, I was just trying to finish the match and ​one point turned into another," said Gauff, who finished runner-up in Madrid and Rome last ​year before winning the French Open.

"I think I got what everybody else is having here in Madrid, unfortunately. So I'm just going to try to push through for tomorrow."

On Saturday, six-times Grand Slam champion Iga ​Swiatek retired from her match against American Ann Li due to illness, saying she had ​a virus that had left her with "zero energy".

Gauff, however, managed to battle on and take control as ‌the ⁠match continued but the American barely had the energy to celebrate her victory as she hunched over her racquet after securing progress.

"It was a weird feeling today. I don't know how I got through it," Gauff added.

"I'm not someone who likes to pull out ​so I didn't want ​to pull out again ⁠today. I'm glad that I was able to get through it."

Medical intervention proved crucial in Gauff's comeback, with the third seed feeling ​significantly better by the final set.

"I did start to feel better (in ​the final ⁠set), not feeling like I had to throw up. They gave me some pills so that definitely helped, but I was really tired," she said.

"I could play while being tired. The ⁠first ​part was literally just trying to keep whatever I ​ate down and once they gave me something to help with that, then I was just nauseous and tired. ​But I can deal with that."

Recommended For You

Follow Us on Social Media