The Borneo Post

Barty not concerned despite first up loss

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BRISBANE, Australia: World number one Ashleigh Barty remains upbeat about her Australian Open preparatio­ns despite losing her opening match of the season at the Brisbane Internatio­nal on Thursday.

American qualifier Jennifer Brady notched up her first ever win over a top 10 player when she beat Barty 6-4, 7-6 (7/4) on Pat Rafter Arena.

It was Barty’s first match on home soil since becoming world number one, and came at the venue she trains at and in front of thousands of her adoring home fans.

Barty conceded afterwards she had simply been outplayed by Brady, who also beat former world number one Maria Sharapova in the first round.

“Jen was in control of the match – she was in the centre of the court being the aggressor and I think you have to give credit where credit’s due,” Barty, who practised with Brady early this week, said.

“She came through qualifying, but she’s got a ranking that’s kind of well below what a lot of people give her credit for.

“She’s playing some exceptiona­l tennis, so I certainly can’t take that away from her. She played a great match today and deserved to win.”

Barty grew up in Ipswich on Brisbane’s western outskirts and has had hundreds of fans packing outside courts to watch her practice this week.

But when she was asked whether she felt any pressure because of the attention she insisted she didn’t feel any different.

“I think that’s (the pressure) all

It doesn’t change the way that I practice. It doesn’t change the way that my team and I prepare. It doesn’t change me as a person. Ashleigh Barty

come you from you guys, if I’m being completely honest,” she said.

“It doesn’t change the way that I practice. It doesn’t change the way that my team and I prepare. It doesn’t change me as a person.

“I think that you guys enjoy the fact that you get something to write about and you have something to talk about. So hopefully I make it interestin­g for you, but I don’t look at it beyond that.”

Brady will now play two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, who beat Russian qualifier Liudmila Samsonova 63, 6-2.

World number two and defending champion had to battle for two hours to avoid the same fate as Barty, eventually beating Australian wildcard Ajla Tomljanovi­c 6-4, 6-7 (5/7), 6-1.

Pliskova will meet Alison Riske of the US in the quarter-finals. — AFP

 ?? — Bernama photo ?? World number one Kento Momota of Japan hits a return during the Malaysia Masters men’s singles match against Prannoy HS of India at Axiata Arena in Bukit Jalil yesterday. Momota won 21-14, 21-16 to advance into the quarterfin­als.
— Bernama photo World number one Kento Momota of Japan hits a return during the Malaysia Masters men’s singles match against Prannoy HS of India at Axiata Arena in Bukit Jalil yesterday. Momota won 21-14, 21-16 to advance into the quarterfin­als.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Barty reacts after a point against Jennifer Brady of the US.
— AFP photo Barty reacts after a point against Jennifer Brady of the US.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Jazz Janewattan­anond of Thailand chips onto the 17th green during the final round of the BNI Indonesian Masters golf tournament at the Royale Jakarta Golf Club in Jakarta in December last year.
— AFP photo Jazz Janewattan­anond of Thailand chips onto the 17th green during the final round of the BNI Indonesian Masters golf tournament at the Royale Jakarta Golf Club in Jakarta in December last year.

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