A bagel set and a nervy decider later, the No. 3 seed is through at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia with history already within reach.
The match that Coco Gauff wanted and the match she got on Saturday in Rome were not the same thing, and for one set, the gap was visible. Then came the correction.
Gauff, the No. 3 seed at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, recovered from dropping the first set to defeat Argentine qualifier Solana Sierra 5-7, 6-0, 6-4 in two hours and 10 minutes on clay at the Foro Italico. The win sends Gauff into the Round of 16 for the fifth time in her career at this tournament, and pushes her career record in Rome to 19 wins, more than she has accumulated at any non-major event.
Sierra wins the first, Gauff wins the argument
The opening set told one story. Gauff broke early to move ahead 2-0, Sierra leveled, and the two traded breaks before Sierra took command in the 11th game. She served out the set 7-5, and her frustration surfaced briefly, striking herself on the head with her racket in a moment that spread quickly across social media.
What followed was its own kind of answer. Gauff broke in the first game of the second set and never looked back, sweeping through 6-0. It was her fifth bagel set of the 2026 season, trailing only Anna Bondar and Mirra Andreeva, who have recorded six each.
Gauff survives the third with history on the line
The deciding set was less clean but no less decisive in the end. Sierra opened with two breaks to race ahead 3-0, threatening to make the second set look like an outlier. Gauff responded by winning five straight games to lead 5-3, then held a match point in the ninth game before Sierra broke back to stay alive.
The reprieve was brief. Sierra could not hold serve in the following game, and Gauff closed out the match. Across the second and third sets combined, She conceded only one hold of serve to Sierra, a statistic that captures how thoroughly the match shifted after the first set ended.
The serve remained a concern throughout. Five double faults compounded a season-long pattern that has already drawn scrutiny, after she hit seven against Tereza Valentová in the second round. But the return game absorbed the pressure. Gauff created 23 break points during the match and converted nine of them, while Sierra converted six of 10 opportunities.
Where Gauff stands in Rome’s record books
The victory adds another layer to a growing historical footnote at this tournament. In the Open Era, only Gabriela Sabatini, with seven appearances, reached the Rome Round of 16 more often before turning 23. Gauff has now reached the Round of 16 at WTA 1000 clay events eight times before turning 23, surpassing Iga Swiatek’s previous mark of seven.
Only Sabatini with 31 wins and Swiatek with 20 won more matches at the event before age 23 in the Open Era. Gauff’s 19 now puts her in that company, and the tournament is still running.
What comes next for Gauff in Rome
Gauff, now 20-8 this season, will face the winner of the all-American third-round match between No. 16 seed Iva Jovic and qualifier Taylor Townsend. A match against Jovic would be their first meeting on tour. She trails Townsend 0-1 in their head-to-head record.
The defending finalist now sits one win from the quarterfinals at the Foro Italico for a second consecutive year, having reached the final in 2025 before losing to Jasmine Paolini. Today’s win, messy as parts of it were, keeps that possibility very much alive.

