Questions won’t stop for Osaka
June 2: Unfortunately for Naomi Osaka, the questions will keep coming. There’s nowhere to run and certainly no place to hide when you’re a superstar travelling the world and playing on the biggest stages in tennis.
Some of the questions may be repetitive. Some may even be a bit negative, though for the most part those in the tennis media tend to treat top players with kid gloves.
Regardless, it’s part of her job to answer them. That’s not going to change, even with Osaka’s withdrawal from the French Open after refusing to appear at the news conferences every other top player accepts as part of the job.
Only now she’ll have even more questions to answer.
That’s not entirely Osaka’s fault, though she did herself no favors by the clumsy way she handled her mini media revolt in Paris. She blew off her first post-match news conference, after declaring earlier in a posting online that she didn’t want to
hear the same questions over and over and saying that reporters tend to kick players while they are down.
In other words, she didn’t want to answer questions about why she didn’t play better on clay.
Osaka rebounded a bit in a second statement announcing her withdrawal, and that’s where it gets tricky. She revealed she had suffered long periods of depression after winning the U.S. Open in 2018 and that she suffers great anxiety when faced
with having to answer questions from journalists at news conferences.
We all can and should be sympathetic to that. Depression and anxiety can be devastating and debilitating, as anyone who has suffered from them or dealt with a family member who has them knows so well.
Nobody should begrudge Osaka’s decision to withdraw from a major championship because she’s having trouble coping with those issues. Indeed, we should all support her efforts to improve her mental health.
But let’s make this clear, this isn’t a media problem. It isn’t a news conference problem.
Frankly, until Osaka said she would not show up for her news conference and then blew off tournament organisers who wondered why, no one even knew there was a problem.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with a system that requires athletes who are paid millions of dollars to perform to be asked about their play afterward. There’s also nothing wrong with reporters asking an occasional question that may not fit the positive narrative Osaka wants when writing about the newest star in tennis.
It’s part of the reason why tournaments like the French Open sell out expensive seats every year. It’s a lot of the reason Forbes said Osaka made $37 million in 2019, most of it in endorsements from companies that expect Osaka to generate lots of press for their products. —