The Freeman

With the world at her feet, Osaka takes Paris in her stride

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Twelve months ago at Roland Garros, an embarrasse­d Naomi Osaka bristled at being hailed as the ‘coolest thing’ in tennis.

Now, however, the 21-year-old Japanese returns to Paris as comfortabl­y the sport’s hottest ticket with the world number one billing, a bank balance bursting at the seams and on the brink of a third successive Grand Slam title.

“The one word that comes to my mind is amazing,” says Osaka’s older sister Mari, a fellow tour player.

“I’m really proud of her.”

Naomi Osaka was seeded at a Grand Slam for the first time at the 2018 French Open when she made the third round, countering claims she was the ‘coolest thing in tennis’ by asserting she was the sport’s ‘most awkward person’.

But it was the razzledazz­le of New York -- helped by a mega-meltdown by Serena Williams -- which propelled her to a maiden Slam triumph in September.

That was backed up by a second major at the Australian Open, her status as the face of the new generation of women’s tennis comfortabl­y confirmed.

Osaka, the daughter of a Haitian father and Japanese mother, has since been signed up by Nike in a deal reportedly worth in the region of $10 million a year.

Despite being based full-time in the United States and still often struggling with the Japanese language, sponsors from home have come calling -- from an airline and car-maker to a noodle company and detergent manufactur­er.

In Japan, her coy personalit­y and breezy news conference­s have made her into a media darling.

‘Naomi-speak’ was among the most searched phrases online in 2018.

“She’s multicultu­ral, multinatio­nal, multiracia­l,” Stuart Duguid, Osaka’s agent and an IMG executive, told Britain’s Financial Times.

However, fame still sits uncomforta­bly with Osaka whose career earnings have already rocketed past the $11 million mark.

In the wake of her Australian Open triumph, she shocked tennis by splitting with coach Sascha Bajin, one of the mastermind­s of her meteoric rise.

 ??  ?? Japan’s Naomi Osaka reacts during a press conference after her victory against Czech Republic’s Petra Kvitova in the women’s singles final on day 13 of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne. AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE
Japan’s Naomi Osaka reacts during a press conference after her victory against Czech Republic’s Petra Kvitova in the women’s singles final on day 13 of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne. AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE

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