Jessica Pegula: The queen of resilience claims her most epic win in Charleston and sets her sights on Rybakina
If there's one thing you should never do when facing Jessica Pegula, it's writing off the match as over. The American proved it again at the Credit One Charleston Open, where she delivered what is now the longest victory of her entire career. No exaggeration, folks: three and a half hours of pure drama on the green clay, against a Yulia Putintseva who pushed her to the absolute limit, both physically and mentally. And Pegula, like the great champion she is, found a way to win.
The Charleston marathon: when a record is built on grit
I'm not just talking about the time on court. I'm talking about the comeback. Pegula lost the first set 5-7 and was down 2-4 in the second. Anyone else would have headed for the shower, already thinking about the next tournament. But not her. She brought out the heavy artillery – that backhand that cuts through the air like a knife – and started playing every point as if it were the last of her life. The final score: 5-7, 7-6(4), 7-5. When it ended, the crowd at the Family Circle Tennis Center rose to their feet. And from the newsroom, so did I.
This win isn't just a fun story. It's a statement of intent heading into the clay-court swing. And the best part? Jessica Pegula career statistics already include a handful of epic battles, but none as long as this one. Check this out: throughout all of 2025, she hadn't gone past two hours and forty minutes. Here, she broke the clock – and her opponent's spirit as well.
From New York to Charleston: the spirit of "A Racquet at The Rock"
You know that energy she brings when playing on home soil? It's the same one she showed at last year's charity event, A Racquet at The Rock, where she mixed high-level tennis with her philanthropic side. That event made it clear: Pegula isn't just a title-winning machine. She's a competitor who sees sport as an extension of her character. And that character is pure rock.
Because let's be honest: when we look at her numbers, we sometimes forget how consistent she's been. Since 2021, she's been a permanent fixture in the world's top 10. She's reached quarter-finals at every Grand Slam, won WTA 1000 titles in Montreal and Guadalajara – and most importantly, she's never hidden when the heat is on. That's what separates the good from the legends.
The ghost of Selekhmeteva and the shadow of Rybakina
Speaking of big moments, I can't help but recall that wild clash against Oksana Selekhmeteva at the 2024 Australian Open. The Russian, then relatively unknown, pushed her to a third-set tiebreak. And once again, Pegula stepped up with a couple of forehands that still echo around Rod Laver Arena. That ability to find her best tennis when the house is burning down is what makes her a perpetual contender for everything.
And now comes the big one. In the round of 16 in Charleston, fate has set up a meeting with Elena Rybakina. A Pegula vs. Rybakina clash that promises to be one of those matches we remember while munching on popcorn. The Kazakh has the most fearsome serve on tour and a backhand that seems from another planet. But Pegula has something Rybakina is still learning: the patience to grind you down, to change rhythms, to make the other player falter in the key moments.
- Head-to-head: Rybakina leads 3-2, but Pegula has won the last two on hard courts.
- On clay: They've never faced each other. Advantage Pegula, who has grown tremendously on this surface over the past year.
- Key to the match: The first strike. If Pegula can hold her nerve through the first three games of each set, the pressure will shift sides.
More than numbers: a leader on and off the court
But it's not all stats and matchups. Jessica Pegula is also the public face of a generational shift in women's tennis. While others get lost in injuries or confidence swings, she has built her career brick by brick: tournament by tournament, win by win. And even though she doesn't yet have a Grand Slam in her trophy cabinet, she has already won something more valuable: the unanimous respect of the locker room.
So now you know. If you tune in tonight to watch Pegula vs. Rybakina, don't blink during the second sets. Because with Jessica, the show always starts when everything seems lost. And in Charleston, the clay smells like a new queen. Next stop? The sky. Or at least, the semi-finals.