Womens Tennis

Errani, Paolini prevail from a set down to claim Olympic doubles gold medal

Errani, Paolini prevail from a set down to claim Olympic doubles gold medal

Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini of Italy pulled off a come-from-behind victory to clinch the Olympic gold medal in women’s doubles, wrapping up the tennis event at the 2024 Paris Games.

No.3 seeds Errani and Paolini shook off a tough first set and outlasted unseeded youngsters Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider of the Individual Neutral Athletes 2-6, 6-1, [10-7] in the championship match on Court Philippe Chatrier at Roland Garros.

Historic moments: With the Olympic gold medal, Errani completes the Career Golden Slam in women’s doubles. She teamed with Roberta Vinci to win all four Grand Slam titles in women’s doubles between 2012 and 2014.

Errani and Paolini also made history for their country. This is the first Olympic gold medal for Italy in any of the tennis events, and the first tennis medals of any color for Italian women.


Clive Brunskill/Getty Images

Commanding on clay: Errani and Paolini have had an exceptional season, especially on clay. They won the WTA 1000 title on home soil at Rome in May, then reached the French Open doubles final at this very site in June. The pair has a 26-8 win-loss record on tour this year.

Passion, camaraderie key in Errani and Paolini’s Rome win

On Sunday, the veteran experience of Errani combined with Paolini’s breakthrough form, overcoming the power plays from their younger opponents. The ages of the players in the gold-medal final ranged from 37-year-old Errani to 17-year-old Andreeva.

Silver lining: The week has still been quite productive for Andreeva and 20-year-old Shnaider, who earned the Olympic silver medal. They upset three seeded teams in straight sets en route to the final, and were a set away from a fourth before the Italians stormed back from behind.

Golden points: Andreeva and Shnaider powered past the Italians in the first set, and Shnaider had 40-0 on her serve to open the second set. But Errani and Paolini shored up their groundstrokes and court positioning, breaking Shnaider and sweeping through the second set.

With outstanding lobs and volleys, Errani was a dominant force as she and Paolini took a 7-3 lead in the decisive match-tiebreak. Andreeva and Shnaider pulled as close as 8-7, but one more potent Errani volley forced an error from Shnaider to reach double championship point.

On the first match point, Andreeva…

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