WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Caty McNally was one of the few female entrants
at Wimbledon with
a female coach: Her mother, Lynn Nabors McNally.
Mom does not travel full-time on tour with Caty — someone else she's worked with for six years, Kevin O'Neill, does — but they use a two-coach setup at the biggest events, including Grand Slam tournaments.
McNally, a 21-year-old from Ohio who was the runner-up in women's doubles at the U.S. Open each of the past two years, once alongside Coco Gauff and once alongside Taylor Townsend, wishes female coaches weren't so rare at the pro level. There are just 13 women ranked in the Top 200 with a female coach; four of those coaches are the player's mother.
It would be nice, McNally says, if there were more women around. She looks at her male counterparts — every man who was in the singles field at
the All England Club is coached by a man — and thinks, "Why can't it be that way for us?"
"There's a different vibe because of it. A different environment. On the men's side, the coaches are always in the locker room with the players, just hanging out. On the women's side, you don't see that; it's only the players in the locker room," McNally said last week after a session at the All England Club's Aorangi Park practice courts with her mother and O'Neill.