New York:Three years ago, a reporter asked Sloane Stephens to point out a younger tennis player most fans might not have heard of yet, someone she thought could become a household name some day.
Stephens paused to ponder, but not for long, before responding: Coco Gauff, then 14.
Stephens had first met Gauff several years earlier and clearly knew what she was talking about. The world would quickly discover Gauff, too. The pair of friends met in an official match for the first time on Wednesday night at the US Open, and it was Stephens, the 2017 champion now ranked 66th, who pulled away for a 6-4 6-2 victory over Gauff, now 17 and seeded 21st.
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Afterward, the pair met at the net for a warm hug, before Stephens praised the player and person Gauff has become.
"I love Coco. I think everyone knows I love Coco. At the end of the match, I said, I love you.' She's such a great player and I feel so lucky to have seen her grow up and play since she was 8," Stephens told the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd.
"I know," Stephens added, "there's going to be great things ahead for her."
With the Ashe roof shut during a heavy downpour a tornado warning was in effect in the region the thump-thump-thump of the rain created a bass beat that drowned out the usual sounds of a tennis match. It was so loud Stephens could barely hear the questions during her on-court interview.
Only one other court at Flushing Meadows can be covered during bad weather, but even that was an issue Wednesday evening, because wind helped push rain through the space between the concourse and the retractable cover at Louis Armstrong Stadium. So the match between two-time major finalist Kevin Anderson and Diego Schwartzman was delayed for nearly a half-hour at 5-all in the first set while workers used air blowers to dry the playing surface.
Scheduled for later in Armstrong was three-time Slam champ Angelique Kerber against Anhelina Kalinina, with the winner taking on Stephens. And last in Ashe was French Open runner-up Stefanos Tsitsipas against Adrian Mannarino, looking to join other men who moved on such as No. 2 Daniil Medvedev and No. 5 Andrey Rublev.