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Coco Gauff hasn’t slowed down since winning her second Grand Slam title with a jam-packed visit in the city that brought her first major trophy.

The 21-year-old has been a popular booking for several national network shows in New York after becoming the first American in 10 years to win Roland Garros with a superb comeback victory over top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka.

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And Gauff hasn’t showed up alone, bringing her mini replica of the Suzanne-Lenglen cup along for the appearances.

“I didn’t know it was going to be as small as it is," she told “TODAY” co-hosts Savannah Guthrie and Craig Melvin.

“It is adorable. It’s mini-size, like the little mini-brands, so that’s what this is. It looks just like the real one, just smaller.”

Gauff later flexed the hardware in her late-night television debut by crashing the end of Jimmy Fallon’s monologue on “The Tonight Show” to a standing ovation.

Audience members unanimously voted 217 to 0 in deciding that “Coco Gauff is a national treasure and one of the greatest athletes living today.”

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The glittering homecoming didn’t stop there. Gauff enjoyed a long-awaited first WNBA game from a courtside view with her youngest brother Cameron. The two sat next to Vanessa Bryant and her family in watching the New York Liberty sink the Chicago Sky.

When Gauff was shown on the jumbotron, the Barclays Center exploded into a frenzy.

“That was insane!” reacted Gauff with ESPN’s Holly Rowe. “I wasn’t expecting everyone to stand up. It just feels so cool to come back to such a warm reception.”

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On “Good Morning America” with Robin Roberts, the world No. 2 said of the whirlwind, “I think the main piece of advice everyone's told me is to take it in and soak it in, and then when it's time to get back to work, get back to work.”

Tennis rarely stops, and so that work will resume soon with a surface switch to grass. Gauff is currently slated to play the WTA 500 in Berlin next week among a field that includes Sabalenka, defending champion Jessica Pegula, 2024 Wimbledon finalist Jasmine Paolini, Zheng Qinwen, Mirra Andreeva and Australian Open title holder Madison Keys.

INTERVIEW: Coco Gauff, new Roland Garros champion