Caty McNally is the Cincinnati native whose name the tour learned in doubles before singles. Born in 2001 in the suburb of Madeira and coached from the start by her mother Lynn, a former pro, she built one of the deepest junior résumés of her generation: the 2018 French Open girls' doubles title at 16 alongside a teenage Iga Swiatek, then the US Open junior doubles crown that September with Coco Gauff — the partnership fans christened "McCoco." She turned pro in 2018 and has carried that doubles instinct into everything since.
That pedigree shapes how she plays. McNally is a right-hander with a left-hander's appetite for the net — a two-handed backhand she can carve or drive, soft hands on the volley, and a willingness to come forward that most baseline-bound peers don't share. The serve and forehand have been the swing variables across her career; when both fire, she can trouble the top of the draw, and when they misfire she leans on craft and court sense to stay in matches.
The singles arc has been a grind of rebuilds rather than a straight climb. McNally pushed into the top 100 and notched wins over established names, but injuries and form dips repeatedly forced her back to the development circuit before she clawed her way up again. The doubles trophies kept coming — she and Gauff have lifted tour-level titles together — while the singles game took longer to settle into a consistent identity.
This season she sits at No. 59, her ranking reflecting steady recent results across the hard-court and clay swings. With the grass run through Wimbledon ahead and the US hard-court stretch toward Cincinnati and the US Open looming on home soil, the back half of 2026 is McNally's window to push the singles ranking past where the doubles reputation set the bar.