Jessica Pegula ends coaching relationship with David Witt

Jessica Pegula ends coaching relationship with David Witt

The American duo became a fixture in the later rounds of big tournaments.

GettyImages-1601705553

David Witt, who coached Jessica Pegula during her ascendancy to the uppermost reaches of tennis, is no longer working with the American star.

The decision was Pegula’s and was made shortly after her second-round exit from this year’s Australian Open.

“It was a total surprise to me,” Witt told TENNIS.com on Monday, two weeks after he and Pegula spoke. “Never saw it coming.”

Despite the split, Witt thanks Pegula for the opportunity and looks forward to his next challenge.

“We’ve had a great friendship for five years, so it’s very tough,” says Witt, who coached Venus Williams before Pegula. “I really value my relationship with my player just as much as I love coaching.

“It’s a tough business. I’ve been pretty lucky that I’ve only been with two players the last 15 years.”

David Witt, coach of Jessica Pegula, wins 2022 WTA Coach of the Year award

“It was a total surprise to me,” Witt told TENNIS.com on Monday, two weeks after he and Pegula spoke. “Never saw it coming.”

© Getty Images

Witt began working with Pegula in 2019 before the Buffalo, N.Y. native had won a WTA-level title or cracked the Top 75. In their very first tournament together—the 2019 Citi Open, in Washington, D.C.—Pegula emerged the winner (beating a then-66th-ranked Iga Swiatek along the way).

When asked about the highlights of their time together, Witt names that initial conquest off the top.

“The hard work she put in and we put in, that was something to remember,” Witt recalls. “Seeing your player succeed is the best feeling in the world.”

The achievement sowed the seeds for Pegula’s future run of success, though it took time to bloom. She reached her first Grand Slam quarterfinal at the 2021 Australian Open, and later that season cracked the Top 25 with Witt in her corner.

World's richest tennis player leaves coach stunned after axing him out of  the blue | Tennis | Sport | Express.co.uk

Pegula won two of her four career singles titles in 2023, including her second WTA 1000 tournament, in Montreal.

© 2023 Getty Images

Beginning with the 2022 Australian Open, Pegula reached the quarterfinal round in six of the next seven Grand Slam tournaments (she has yet to reach a Slam semifinal, however).

“You just never know how high a player can go,” says Witt. “Me as a coach, I go into it thinking I’m going to try to get the best out of the player that I’m working with. I think we’ve done that.

“She’s obviously knocking on the door [of winning a major]. Our goal was to win a Grand Slam. Obviously, that was cut short, didn’t get to accomplish that, but I think everything else has been awesome.”

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *