Yuma Sun

Kerber goes from champ to 1st-round loser

No. 1 Nadal overcomes 1st-set hiccup before overpoweri­ng Lajovic 7-6 (6), 6-2, 6-2

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NEW YORK — The question was rather simple after Angelique Kerber became only the second defending U.S. Open champion in the profession­al era to lose in the first round. The surprising­ly lopsided 6-3, 6-1 loss to 45thranked Naomi Osaka of Japan under the closed roof in Arthur Ashe Stadium at a rainy Flushing Meadows on Tuesday was former No. 1 Kerber’s latest in a long list of disappoint­ing performanc­es in 2017, so she was asked what she thinks went wrong this season.

She sighed, shrugged her shoulders and began to answer: “I don’t know.”

Moments later, her eyes darting around the room, she added, “This year is a completely different year.”

Talk about an understate­ment. In 2016, Kerber broke through to the top of tennis in a spectacula­r way. A player with only one previous Grand Slam semifinal appearance reached the first three major title matches of her career, winning two of them: She stunned Serena Williams in the Australian Open final, lost to Williams in the Wimbledon final, and then beat Karolina Pliskova in the U.S. Open final to rise to the top of the WTA rankings for the first time.

Her follow-up has been quite a flop. Kerber, a 29-year-old German, hasn’t won any title of any sort this season. She is only 2518 overall, 0-9 against opponents ranked in the top 20, and Tuesday’s loss assured her of falling out of the top 10 for the first time since October 2015. At Grand Slam tournament­s she is 6-4, including another firstround loss in May at the French Open, where she became that tournament’s first No. 1 seed to lose so early.

“I know that I’m strong and I know that I will come back stronger, for sure. I know that I will not (be) giving up,” said Kerber, the first defending champion to lose in the U.S. Open’s first round since Svetlana Kuznetsova in 2005.

Showers showed up before noon Tuesday and led to the postponeme­nts of dozens of matches. The only court used in the afternoon and evening was Ashe, thanks to the retractabl­e cover constructe­d ahead of last year’s tournament.

Pliskova, who is seeded No. 1, easily advanced by beating Magda Linette 6-2, 6-1, French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko got past Lara Arruabarre­na 6-2, 1-6, 6-1 in a match that started on Court 17 then was moved indoors at Ashe, and No. 23 Barbora Strycova defeated Misaki Doi 6-1, 6-3. Yet another seeded woman was eliminated when No. 28 Lesia Tsurenko lost to Yanina Wickmayer 6-3, 6-1.

At night in Ashe, No. 15 Madison Keys of the U.S. compiled a 32-9 edge in win-

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? ABOVE: NAOMI OSAKA, OF JAPAN, REACTS AFTER SCORING A POINT against Angelique Kerber, of Germany, during the first round of the U.S. Open on Tuesday in New York. RIGHT: Kerber returns a shot from Osaka during the first round.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ABOVE: NAOMI OSAKA, OF JAPAN, REACTS AFTER SCORING A POINT against Angelique Kerber, of Germany, during the first round of the U.S. Open on Tuesday in New York. RIGHT: Kerber returns a shot from Osaka during the first round.

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