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Julie Coin !

46K views 360 replies 46 participants last post by  Sobachka 
#1 · (Edited)
I’ve been thinking about starting a thread about Julie for a long time and her superb performance in USO qualies where she has reached her first GS MD in singles convinced me that she’s definitely deserving more interest!:bounce:

Julie has always been a top10 junior in France but she’s never been a big name and became quite forgotten on french soil when she decided to go to the USA to study at Clemson university where she has been really successful and was ranked second in the nation and a first-team All-American in singles and doubles.

After this experience, she started to play more on the itf circuit and results didn’t took long to come in 2005 with a a SF in a 10k in the Netherlands and a stunning victory in 25k Les Contamines coming from qualifying and not even ranked in the top1000. She added another 10k in London to finish the year ranked 367th!

Her first complete season on tour in 2006 saw Julie maintaining a good level of play, though she didn t won any singles title but reached two finals and defeated promising youngsters like Cibulkova, Lisicki or Goerges and good players like Mattek, Voracova and Tamaela. She also played her first GS qualifying tournament in Roland Garros (l. 1st round against Nicole Pratt) and a few wta events (also in qualies). She finished this year ranked 269th.

In 2007, Julie continued on her way to finish within the top200 for the first time, reaching the 2nd round of qualies in New York and playing well in ITF (from 25k’s to 100k’s), defeating Scheepers, Esperon, Zhang, Pelletier, Jugic-Salkic, Pavlyuchenkova, Cetkovska, Pichet, Larsson and Yakimova.

So far 2008 has been ok for Julie, with a win in 25k Belfort in February, a first final in a 50k in Vancouver, where she wasn’t far from the title and wins against Martinez Sanchez, Flipkens, Shvedova and Ditty. She played the 4 GS in qualies for the 1st time in a year, reaching the 2nd round in Paris and qualifying in New York with good wins against WC McDowell, Sesil Karatancheva and Elena Baltacha, she will play Casey Dellacqua in the 1st round, a player who loves frenchgirls in GS this year, but who knows? Everything is possible.

To finish, I think Julie can follow the steps of fellow late bloomers like Céline Beigbeder, Séverine Brémond or Olivia Sanchez and reach the top100. She’s got a classic game with a 2 handed backhand but can be offensive and her serve is quite reliable.

Hope Julie will have a nice finish in 2008 and I don’t want to read anymore that playing her is an easy draw, like I’ve been reading all week from people who didn’t even knew who she is before reading her name!!
 
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#2 · (Edited)
A few facts about Julie :

Born : December, 2 1982

Career High Singles : 60

Career High Doubles : 49


Singles

Titles (10) : 2005 : Les Contamines (25k) , London-Hampstead (10k)
2007 : Merida (10k)
2008 : Belfort (25k), Joué-les-Tours (50k)
2009 : Clearwater (50k), Tokyo (100k+H)
2013 : Clermont-Ferrand (25k)
2014 : Saguenay (50k)
2015 : Ponta Delgada (10k)

Finals (12) : 2006 : Oberhaching (10k), Amiens (10k)
2007 : Les Contamines (25k)
2008 : Vancouver (50k), Poitiers (100k)
2009 : Lexington (50k)
2011 : Vigo (25k)
2012 : Denver (50k), Equeurdreville (25k)
2013 : Rancho Mirage (25k), Lexington (50k)
2014 : Clermont-Ferrand (25k)

Doubles

Titles (16) : 2001 : Amiens (10k) with Cappelletti
2005 : Le Touquet (10k) with Hall
2007 : Grenoble (10k) with Benamar
2008 : Tenerife (25k) with Huck, Getxo (25k) with Tweedie-Yates, Madrid (25k)
with Pavlovic
2009 : Cagnes-sur-Mer (100k) with Pelletier, Poitiers (100k) with Pelletier
2011 : Woking (25k) with Hrdinová, Les Contamines (25k) with Hrdinová
Istanbul (50k) with Hrdinová
2012 : Pelham (25k) with Pelletier, Joué-les-Tours (50k) with Beltrame
2013 : Nottingham (50k) with Foretz-Gacon, Joué-les-Tours (50k) with Vrljic
2015 : Midland (100k) with Webley-Smith

Finals (11) : 2006 : Stuttgart (10k) with Chevalier, Amiens (10k) with Mraz
2008 : Cagnes sur mer (100k) with Pelletier, Joué-les-Tours (50k) with Huck
2009 : Bronx (100k) with Pelletier
2011 : Nantes (50k+H) with Hrdinová
2012 : Andrézieux-Bouthéon (25k) with Hrdinová, Bath (25k) with South
2013 : Granby (25k) with Webley-Smith
2015 : Croissy-Beaubourg (50k) with Johansson, Tunis (50k) with Foretz
 
#3 ·
Amazing performance for Julie in New York, without problems the best of her career so far, after qualifying for her first GS and tour event of any kind, she has defeated her first top100 player in the 1st round, Casey Dellacqua (#40) who enjoys her best season with great results in all GS (1 4th round and 2 3rd rounds).

She's gonna crack the top 150 for the first time and for sure will play on a big court for her second round because she's going to play world number 1 Ana Ivanovic:worship:

Congratulations and good luck Julie!:angel:
 
#8 ·
:worship::worship::worship::worship::worship: Julie

Honestly I wasn't even dreaming of this, even knowing Ana's bad form.

One of the biggest upset of the Open era, the 188th with no prior appearance in any main draw on tour nor top100 win before the US Open defeating the world number one! F... ME!!!!:lol:

Really well done and deserved Julie and please don't finish your run against Amélie, show her who's the best in Picardie!;)
 
#13 ·
Interview with Julie after her 2nd round win (from the US Open official website)

Q. I watched you play qualifying at the challenger in the Bronx two weeks ago where you lost to an Irish girl who was ranked 200th in the world. Would you imagine that two weeks later you'd be here on Arthur Ashe stadium beating the No. 2 in the world?

JULIE COIN: I guess saying like that, no. Yeah, the Bronx was pretty hard to get motivation like to be really focused there. So I was like in quallies, but yeah, I would I guess ‑‑ I don't know, before the tournament I was not like imagining it this way like it happened today.


Q. What do you think when you're serving for the match. You double faulted once; were you getting nervous?

JULIE COIN: Well, yeah, yeah, I did, kind of. Like I was hoping putting my first serve in and then I missed it and I was like, "oh, shoot." I have to put the second serve.

I know she's a good player so she's going to go for it. But yeah, so then I tried for too much I guess.


Q. There was a couple of times where you tossed the ball in the air too and you stopped yourself. What was happening there?

JULIE COIN: Yeah, sometimes I go too fast. I throw my ball too fast so I was like it's not the right toss, so I stopped the point. It's not like nervous or anything. I just do it too fast.


Q. Would you just describe how you got to Clemson? Most European women just turn pro right away. How did you end up at the university?

JULIE COIN: Well, at that time, my, boyfriend told me like he wanted to go, and I was just like in university in France and practicing maybe three times a week.

I had a good French ranking but I wasn't doing really anything. So he told me that and I was like, oh, why not. I will practice every day and see like kind of what's the ‑‑ like what the professionals do except that they don't go school. I liked it and I improved my level too there. So I decided after my last year I finished second in NCAA, so I thought maybe I have the level to play on the tour. My parents told me, yeah, you should try. Because they were good ‑‑ they were playing in another sport but they were good at their sport and never got the chance to do it. So they kind of pushed me to do it I guess. Now it's like I'm happy.


Q. What has Amélie meant to you as a professional tennis player? Talk about her influence and has she influenced you at all as a countrywoman in some ways?

JULIE COIN: Yeah, I guess she's influenced a lot of French players. I know her because she's from my region so I've seen her. Like she was No. 1 in the World Junior. I followed her and I follow her career. She's kind of an idol in France. Everybody loves her. Yeah, like I guess she's the one like we want to follow her steps.


Q. She said just now that she knows a little bit about your game. She said, Am I shocked? She said, no. She said, I am surprised but not shocked because there are things about your game that could pose dangers for any player.

JULIE COIN: Yeah, I guess my serve, like when it's like good so, I still have some stuff to work on.

But that's the good thing. I think I still can improve my game, so...


Q. Having just beaten the No. 1 player in the world you said before talking about that. But also, the fact that you're going to be facing Amélie in the next round, describe what's going through your mind right now.

JULIE COIN: I don't know. I'm not thinking about anything right now. Just like enjoying the moment, and I will see what's going to happen next. I don't know. I'm just playing match ‑‑ like match after match. I don't know.

I don't realize yet that I beat the No. 1 in the world. I don't realize that I played at the big court. I don't know how I'm going sleep tonight. I don't know. It's just ‑‑ maybe tomorrow I will be ‑‑ I will ‑‑ I don't know when I will realize everything. Maybe at the end the tournament when I'm going to be done with it. I don't know.


Q. But I'm not asking to you look ahead two matches, three matches. The next match, Amélie, does that make it a little more special perhaps?

JULIE COIN: I don't know her game. I've never played her. I don't know. It's kind of playing the same ‑‑ like it's kind of playing the No. 1 in the world, too. She used to be No. 1 in the world. So I don't know.


Q. You said on the court before that you were nervous about being at big court.

JULIE COIN: Yeah.


Q. You were supposed to be on the other court?

JULIE COIN: I was supposed to be on Armstrong, but there was like a "not before" and they might move me to the big court. This morning I practice on Armstrong. I never practice on the big one. But Armstrong was nice. It's small and quiet. I was hoping I would play on this one; like for the first time playing on a big court, it's better to be smaller.

I don't know. I didn't know how like with my nerves, nervously how it would go. So I thought maybe it was easier to go on the smaller court. But now it's okay, like I did it, so...


Q. You've mainly been playing the Challenger Tour. Talk a little bit about what life is like on that court and what it would mean for you to move into the WTA?

JULIE COIN: The ITF, it's really hard. Like you have to do everything. Like you have to call for your hotel and like you go in some places not really nice sometimes. Like it depends which country you go.

But sometimes it's hard, like the level is pretty hard too because everyone has to go through the ITF before going on the tour. So it's not easy to go out and like get in the top 100 and be able to play WTA. So ‑‑ but I still have a lot of work to do before being able to play more WTA's so I still have to probably play some ITF's.


Q. What was it like for you after you won the first set and she found some momentum in the second. How do you feel like you responded? But how did you respond to her winning the second set?

JULIE COIN: Well, she started playing a little better at 4‑All. She went like 4, three maybe. And yeah, I was ‑‑ well, I was thinking if she is playing better than me, I don't mind losing if she's just better.

So I just like kept thinking just play your game and put your first serve in and do your best and that's it. It was ‑‑ I lost the second set, but I was only one set away from the win, like she was too. But only one more set...


Q. When you were playing on the ITF events maybe in places that you didn't find very nice, were you considered at any point stopping to play tennis?

JULIE COIN: Well, a couple weeks ago before ‑‑ because I was playing some tournament before I played in the States, but before that, I wasn't playing that good and I was thinking, am I really made to play tennis? Am I going to be able to get in the top 100 one day? Because it's not worth it to play tennis if you're not in the top 100. You're in the shadow of all the best players when you're outside the top 100.

Like at one point I was thinking like to maybe stop at the end of this year. So I guess maybe now I'm going to think about like keep playing.

But I think like the tournament I played before in the States, I played Stanford, L.A. I even played ITF in Vancouver ‑‑ that was pretty nice. My game got better so that helped me for that tournament. So I don't know.


Q. What are your parents' names and what sport did they play?

JULIE COIN: My dad is Philippe Coin and my mom Doriane Coin.


Q. What sports?

JULIE COIN: They played handball. You know, the European sport?


Q. Team handball?

JULIE COIN: Yes.


Q. And they regretted...

JULIE COIN: Well, my mom played in the first like national for ‑‑ I don't remember for which club, and my dad, like when he was younger, he played for the French, like on the French team, but when he was under 16 or something. And they always wanted to be like top players in handball, but they had ‑‑ I guess it's not ‑‑ like it's not easy in handball, you have to work and like ‑‑ they didn't make it.


Q. They pushed you hard to be professional?

JULIE COIN: No, no, no. They just told me follow your dream, like do it. Like they said, we will be behind you if you want to play tennis. So it's pretty nice.


Q. What was your plan if you were to quit? You said at the end of this, maybe before this happened that you would stop. What would you have done?

JULIE COIN: Well, I guess I have a diploma in the States. I have also a French diploma in sports. So I can do a lot of things now. I can be a sports coach, like tennis coach. I don't know. I didn't think about what I will do if I was quitting, but yeah, I'm ‑‑ I have like diploma so it's not like if I stop tennis I have nothing and I'm going to have to go in school and everything. In Clemson I got a bachelor in mathematical sciences. I guess with what I did also in the States playing college it would be easier for me to find a job maybe in the States because I was playing for Clemson and I got a bachelor and everything. So I'm not lost, I think.


Q. There was an especially bad match that made you have those thoughts?

JULIE COIN: Yeah. In Wimbledon, my ‑‑ in quallies my match was just terrible. It was more like nervously it was awful. I was leading and I lost the match and I had couple matches like this. So after a point you're like ‑‑ and you know, when you start thinking too much on the court it's not good, so...


Q. How difficult was it today to block out the crowd and the atmosphere and concentrate on your tennis?

JULIE COIN: Actually it wasn't that hard today. Well, I have a mental coach at home and, we've been working for like ‑‑ I started with him in December, so I guess now the work that we did together starts to pay off.

But today was just ‑‑ well, my parents and everybody was telling me, enjoy the moment, enjoy the moment, so I was on the court and I was enjoying the moment. It's great when you play like when you win a point and the crowd is like getting all excited, after the match point everyone is screaming.

I mean, that doesn't happen every day, so it was pretty good.


Q. Is this the first WTA tournament you've played? Is it the first slam, and you tried at Wimbledon and you did you not qualify at Roland Garros and Wimbledon, et cetera, and you qualified here?

JULIE COIN: Yeah, that's the first time I'm qualifying here like in any Grand Slams. That's my first time.


Q. Did you think it would take so long to get to anything, into a main draw?

JULIE COIN: Well, I always been really slow. I am taking my time. Like when I was younger with the ranking, when like to beat a girl just one ranking higher than I was, it took me like six months every time because I was like, "She's better ranked than me so she's better." So I'm taking things slowly I guess. I'm a slow learner or something.


Q. Were there weaknesses in Ana's game today? Did you sense anything that she was struggling to do out there that you were going to be able to exploit?

JULIE COIN: She made a lot of errors from both sides, but I think more with her forehand. I didn't think she moved too well either. Well, she didn't have really like one big shot today, but the big thing was she made a lot of errors during the match.

So I got a lot of free points. Even with the serves she double faulted a couple times, so I thought she was maybe nervous more than I was. I don't know. I don't know. She's No. 1 and she ‑‑ like if she wanted to stay No. 1 at the end of this tournament she had to do well here. Maybe she had a lot of pressure. I think she was injured too so she's coming back and didn't play too much. So for sure that was hard.

It's a lot of pressure for the top players. Like for us, I mean, it's ‑‑ everything is if we win it's a bonus. For them, they get like, I don't know ‑‑ for them like all of you will write on them like, oh, they lost to the 188 in the world. So it's hard for them, too. I don't know.


Q. Have you spoken to your parents yet?

JULIE COIN: Yeah, yeah, yeah. But they said it wasn't on today. Only the third set. That was Mauresmo, because they said something about they thought my match would go fast or something. So they put Mauresmo, and then they put the third set when it was 1‑All and Love‑40 on my serve when I came back in the game. They looked at like the score.


Q. When you're in Vancouver earlier this month, you made the finals there and won the first set. Did you feel more pressure against Radwanska than you did today?

JULIE COIN: No. It was kind of the same thing. I mean, when you play you always want to win and that was the final so I want to win the tournament for sure. Maybe I got more pressure like that day because that was the final or something. I don't know. Well, today I didn't feel really ‑‑ like I felt nervous at the beginning and then it went away. Like I was just like playing on the courts and playing against a girl. Like it was just like a normal match for me.

And then it came back maybe match point and I was like, okay, now it's like the last point and you need to win the last point. Then the pressure came back. But it was really ‑‑ I don't know how I did it. It's just ‑‑ I don't know, today was just like perfect.


Q. Can I ask a Clemson question: American football is so big there. Did you get into that whole thing?

JULIE COIN: Yeah, yeah, I was watching every game. My first year I couldn't understand American football so somebody had to explain me all the rules. The thing is you go to the clubs with them, and you do the weight room with them and you are around them all the time. Every year at the beginning of the year you go on the field. So ‑‑ and you want to watch all the matches not just for football, but sometimes we play some teams that we don't like, I guess the school makes them like not liking them, you know, like South Carolina, U.S.C. When we get to Clemson they're like, okay, you don't like U.S.C.? Why? Because that's like this, you don't like the chicken, whatever.

So that's like how they teach us. And then you start liking football, too. It's fun.

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#16 ·
#17 ·
Julie also had a page in the New York Times! Here is the article :

This Qualifies as Big: Top-Seeded Ivanovic Falls

By JOSHUA ROBINSON
Published: August 28, 2008

A shriek rang out in Arthur Ashe Stadium. By the time it was over, the underdog-loving fans at the United States Open had drowned Ana Ivanovic out. For the 34th time Thursday afternoon, she had hit an unforced error. And for the first time in the open era, a No. 1 women’s seed was out of the United States Open before the third round.

Julie Coin, a 25-year-old qualifier from France, needed three tries at match point to finally overcome Ivanovic, the top-ranked player in the world, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3, in 1 hour 57 minutes.

Asked on the court if she expected this, Coin could muster only a buoyant, “No.”

“I don’t realize yet that I beat the No. 1 player in the world,” she said during her postmatch news conference. “I don’t realize yet that I played on the big court. I don’t know how I’m going to sleep tonight.”

Ranked 187 spots below Ivanovic, Coin was barely playing on the same tour. She has never won a WTA title because she spends most of her time on the Challenger tour. She had never qualified for the main singles draw of a Grand Slam event until this United States Open. Her record in singles this year, after Thursday’s upset, stands at 19-18. Coming into the Open, her career winnings amounted to $99,563. When Ivanovic won the French Open in June, she took home $1.39 million.

A couple of weeks ago, Coin said, she thought about quitting the game altogether at the end of the season. “I was asking myself, ‘Am I really made to play tennis?’ ” she said. “Am I going to make the top 100? It’s not worth playing tennis if you don’t make the top 100.”

The daughter of two team handball players from Amiens, outside of Paris, Coin (pronounced kweh) has been playing in the United States since she followed her then boyfriend, a tennis player named Clément Reix, to Clemson, where there were already two French players. She was an all-American and made it to the semifinals of the N.C.A.A. tournament in 2004.

Since then, she has kicked around lesser-known events, making her own travel arrangements and carrying her own bags, while developing the powerful serve that carried her over Ivanovic on Thursday.

“I think she was nervous,” said Coin, who won 39 of 47 points on her first serve. “More than I was.”

After they traded the first two sets, Coin went up a break in the third and found herself at 40-30, leading by 5-3. That moment, she said during the French portion of her news conference, was when reality seeped in.

She double-faulted.

It was her fourth of the afternoon, but those were more than canceled out by Ivanovic’s eight double faults. Ivanovic was unrecognizable from the player who won on clay at Roland Garros. But as the top seed at Wimbledon, she lost in the third round, and she has been bothered by a thumb injury for most of the summer hardcourt season.

After Thursday’s defeat, her ranking will probably look different. Six women, including Jelena Jankovic and Serena Williams, entered the Open with a chance to be No. 1, and their chances got better with Ivanovic’s early exit. Williams, in the first night match Thursday, crushed Elena Vesnina of Russia, 6-1, 6-1, to book her spot in the third round.

“This kind of loss I had today is just incentive to work harder,” Ivanovic said. “To go back on the court and to keep working hard and practicing and improving.”

After pulling out of the Olympic singles tournament, where she was the top seed, Ivanovic came to Flushing Meadows under a blanket of questions about her thumb. After developing a row of blisters on it in twice-a-day training sessions, she made a few subtle adjustments that resulted in a fresh injury. She could not hit a ball without pain until a couple of days before the Open.

But on Thursday she played down the impact of the injury saying that the only reason she might have been nervous was that she had never seen Coin play. “So I didn’t know what to expect,” she said.

Ivanovic could hardly be blamed. Even Amélie Mauresmo, who grew up in the same region as Coin and will now face her in the third round, knew little about her. In recent days, the French new media had even written that Mauresmo would not know what Coin looked like. So this morning, Mauresmo said after beating Kaia Kanepi, she sought her out. “Are you the one I don’t recognize?” Mauresmo said she asked Coin.

The French news media made sure that Coin, whose name means “corner” in French, immediately became a household name there. On its Web site, the sports daily L’Equipe had already flashed the headline, “Un Coin de Paradis” — “A Corner of Heaven.”
 
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