Toronto Star

Defending champ Kenin out in upset

- MATTHEW FUTTERMAN

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA—Sofia

Kenin, the reigning champion, was knocked out of the Australian Open on Thursday as unseeded Kaia Kanepi of Estonia beat her decisively, 6-3, 6-2.

Kenin’s second-round defeat was the first major upset of the tournament. Kenin, the No. 4 seed, was the WTA player of the year in 2020 when she won the Australian Open in February and made the French Open final in October.

She has struggled to find her form this year, though. She lost in the quarterfin­als of the Abu Dhabi Open in January, dropping the third set, 6-0, to Maria Sakkari of Greece.

“(Kanepi) obviously played well,” Kenin said Thursday, tears welling in her eyes during a post-match news conference. “I was obviously way too nervous.” A moderator offered her a tissue, which she refused.

Kenin, a 22-year-old American, was never in Thursday’s match against Kanepi, who is 35 and probably on the back end of her career.

Physically imposing at fivefoot-11, Kanepi overpowere­d Kenin with 10 aces and also prompted her to make too many uncustomar­y errors. Kanepi closed out the match with two aces.

“I served well, and that helped me a lot,” Kanepi said after the match, which they played in humid, 90-degree weather. “My plan was to play aggressive.”

Kenin was expression­less as she grabbed her bags and hurried off the court. It was the second loss in 24 hours for the American, who dropped a tough doubles match with her partner, Belinda Bencic of Switzerlan­d, on Wednesday in a third-set tiebreaker.

An hour after her defeat Thursday, Kenin could not explain where her game and the fearlessne­ss she had sometimes displayed had gone.

“I really don’t know what I am doing right now,” she said. “I’m not there 100 per cent, my game, physically, mentally.”

The numbers told the story of the match. Kenin committed 22 unforced errors and failed to convert any of her seven breakpoint opportunit­ies.

Despite her success, Kenin has existed relatively under the radar compared to other young stars in women’s tennis, including Naomi Osaka and even the 16-year-old American Coco Gauff, who has yet to make a Grand Slam quarterfin­al.

Kenin arguably had a better 2020 than Osaka and Simona Halep of Romania, but unlike those stars, she was not invited to play in an exhibition event in Adelaide last month before coming to Melbourne. Serena Williams, the 23-time Grand Slam champion, and Ashleigh Barty of Australia, the world No. 1, also took part in the Adelaide exhibition.

And although Kenin had badly wanted to come to Australia and repeat as champion, her performanc­e will serve as another mark of her inconsiste­ncy.

Before she won the Australian Open last year, Kenin had yet to make the quarterfin­als of a Grand Slam in 11 tries. Then she went all the way.

After the long tennis layoff of last spring and summer, she was the No. 2 seed at the U.S. Open in September, but she was beaten soundly in the fourth round by Elise Mertens of Belgium, the No. 16 seed.

She lost 6-0, 6-0 to Victoria Azarenka in Rome before the French Open, then went to Paris and made the final, where she lost in straight sets to Iga Swiatek, who was the 54th-ranked player in the world before that tournament.

Coming into the Australian Open, she said she felt tremendous pressure to defend her championsh­ip, although it may have been more internal than external.

 ?? WILLIAM WEST AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? No. 4 seed Sofia Kenin of the U.S. lost to Estonia’s unseeded Kaia Kanepi 6-3, 6-2 in the second round of the Australian Open on Thursday. Kenin committed 22 unforced errors during the match.
WILLIAM WEST AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES No. 4 seed Sofia Kenin of the U.S. lost to Estonia’s unseeded Kaia Kanepi 6-3, 6-2 in the second round of the Australian Open on Thursday. Kenin committed 22 unforced errors during the match.

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