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    Coco Gauff heads home to the Miami Open

    MIAMI GARDENS (AP) – Coco Gauff shrugged her right shoulder and chuckled a bit at the notion that she seems to illicit concern from others when she goes through a two- or three-match losing streak – a rough patch in the course of a long season.

    “Sometimes when I don’t do well, people think there’s something personally wrong with me,” Gauff said on the eve of the Miami Open, where the women began main-draw play yesterday and the men get started today.

    Bow out early at one event or two – or drop a trio of outings consecutively, as she did at the Australian Open, Qatar and Dubai in January and February – and fans or former players will ask the 2023 United States (US) Open champion, who just turned 21 last week, whether she’s OK.

    “I’m like, ‘I just lost a couple of matches! I’m chillin’,'” said Gauff, who has a first-round bye because she is seeded number three at the hard-court Masters 1000 event and will get started by taking on another past Grand Slam champion – Petra Kvitova or Sofia Kenin – in the second round later in the week.

    “I’m obviously not happy with those past results, but it’s one of those things that, in the history of my career, I’ve had ups and downs. I still feel like I have a couple more years … (to reach) that point where every week is a great week, I guess,” said Gauff, who is based not far from where the Miami Open is played. “I’m also in the middle of changes in my game; it’s been difficult.”

    She’s spoken frequently about those switches, which began with adjusting her coaching staff after last year’s US Open and also included adapting her serve – with a particular eye on shoring up second serves so as to avoid double-fault issues – and her forehand.

    It’s been clear ever since she burst onto the scene as a 15-year-old qualifier at Wimbledon in 2019, beating seven-time major champion Venus Williams along the way to reaching the fourth round, that Gauff’s backhand is nothing if not elite, while her forehand is the shot that opponents tend to go after.

    The American’s most recent match was a three-set loss to Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Belinda Bencic at Indian Wells, California, in the fourth round last week. Afterward, Bencic spoke about what her thinking was at 4-all in the final set.

    “I felt like she was more tense,” Bencic said about Gauff, “so I felt like that was the right time to go for her forehand.”

    Coco Gauff. PHOTO: AP
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