American world number three Coco Gauff has turned to a biomechanics expert, who helped rival Aryna Sabalenka overcome her serving troubles, on the eve of the US Open.
Gauff, 21, decided to reshuffle her coaching team after hitting a high amount of double faults in her last three matches at the recent Cincinnati Open.
Matt Daly – a grip specialist who paid particular attention to her serve and forehand – has paid the price and left his role with Gauff, despite helping her win the French Open title in June.
Instead, she has been working with technique coach Gavin MacMillan, widely credited with improving Sabalenka and enabling her to win three Grand Slam titles, on the US Open practice courts this week.
Gauff’s other coach, Jean-Christophe Faurel, remains part of the team.
Tweaking technique heading into a tournament with such frenzied attention and high stakes feels like a risky move, but it might pay off for a player who is often able to recover mentally from technical malfunctions during matches.
However, hitting 16 double faults in her Cincinnati exit angainst Italy’s Jasmine Paolini was a final straw, and prompted immediate action.
On Wednesday, Gauff stayed on the practice courts with MacMillan in persistent rain – showing the lengths she is going to in order to fine-tune her game before the singles starts on Sunday.
MacMillan’s anatomical study of Sabalenka focused on improving her fluidity, weight shift and angles, working intensely on her forehand as well as her serve.
It led to the Belarusian’s transformation from a top-10 player into a Grand Slam-winning champion who has dominated the WTA Tour for most of the past two years.
In an interview with Performance-Plus Tennis last year, MacMillan spoke about the difficulties of improving technique with limited practice time during the grind of the WTA Tour.
The Canadian, who played ice hockey as a teenager before switching to a tennis scholarship, has little time before Gauff begins her US Open campaign.
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Source: BBC
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