FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Jessica Pegula dropped her head to the table in front of the microphone, smiling while hoping there might be just one victory awaiting the American in her WTA Finals debut.
She couldn't even get a consolation prize.
The Buffalo native was New York honest about going winless in all three singles matches, capped by a 6-3, 7-5 round-robin loss to Aryna Sabalenka on Friday before a loss in her final doubles match that night with fellow American Coco Gauff left her 0 for 6.
Pegula also tried to remember the strong season that got her to Texas with a No. 3 ranking, and made her and Gauff the first Americans to debut at the WTA Finals in singles and doubles since Lindsay Davenport in 1994.
"I keep telling myself I had such a great year, but that's the tough thing with tennis is you end the year really well and then I come here and I lose all my matches," the 28-year-old said. "I mean, I don't think I've lost this many matches in a short amount of time, this is like the same amount in like three months or something, almost?"