- 2021-07-27 01:50:17
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 12:59:43
Naomi Osaka eliminated from Tokyo Olympics tennis tournament
Photo: AsahiJapan
Olympic Desk: Dhaka,
Jul-27,
The host country’s superstar is out of the Tokyo Olympics.
Naomi Osaka lost to
former French Open finalist Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic 6-1, 6-4
in the third round of the Olympic tennis tournament on Tuesday.
The second-ranked
Osaka, who was born in Japan and grew up in the United States, struggled with
her usually reliable groundstrokes while the left-handed Vondrousova produced a
series of drop-shot winners and other crafty shots that drew her opponent out
of her comfort zone.
“It’s tough for her
also playing in Japan and in the Olympics,” the 42nd-ranked Vondrousova said.
“It’s so much pressure, I cannot imagine.”
Osaka, who lit the
Olympic cauldron in Friday’s opening ceremony, won her opening two matches in
straight sets following a two-month mental-health break. But conditions were
different Tuesday with the roof closed because it was raining outside.
Shortly after the match
was over, organizers said that Osaka had left the venue and would not be
talking to the media.
Osaka spoke openly to
reporters after her first two matches. That came after she announced in May
going into the French Open that she wouldn’t speak to reporters at that
tournament, saying those interactions create doubts for her.
Then, after her
first-round victory in Paris, she skipped the mandatory news conference.
Osaka was fined $15,000
and — surprisingly — publicly reprimanded by those in charge of Grand Slam
tournaments, who said she could be suspended if she kept avoiding the media.
The next day, Osaka
withdrew from Roland Garros entirely to take a mental health break, revealing
she has dealt with depression.
She sat out Wimbledon,
too. So the Tokyo Games marked her return to competition.
Playing Osaka for the
first time, Vondrousova came out with her entire game clicking from the start
and quickly ran out to a 4-0 lead in the first set as Osaka hardly had time to
gather herself.
Osaka then broke
Vondrousova’s serve in the opening game of the second set but almost
immediately handed the break back when she double-faulted to make it 2-2.
After Osaka lost her
serve again to end the match by hitting a cross-court backhand wide, she shook
hands with Vondrousova at the net, walked to her chair, zipped her racket up in
her bag and followed Vondrousova off the court.
While both players
produced 22 winners, Osaka hit 32 unforced errors to Vondrousova’s 10. But it
wasn’t simply an off day for Osaka; it was also an outstanding performance from
Vondrousova.
“I also (beat) Simona
(Halep) twice, but I think now she (Osaka) is the greatest,” Vondrousova said.
“The greatest in the game, and she was also the face of the Olympics so it was
tough for her, I think, to play like this.”
Osaka got a decent 64%
of her first serves in play but won only 49% of the points off her first serve.
During one point midway
through the second set, Vondrousova hit an underspin, scooped forehand approach
shot that landed right on the line — prompting Osaka to stare at the line for a
few seconds in apparent disbelief.
Osaka had break points
to take a 4-3 lead in the second but Vondrousova hit consecutive drop-shot
winners to get back in the game and then held.
About 10 minutes later,
the match was over.
“I just really believed
the second I stepped on the court,” Vondrousova said. “I think that that’s the
main thing.”