The Citizen (Gauteng)

Osaka returns to scene of first tournament win

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– One year after she burst onto the scene with an Indian Wells WTA triumph that launched a meteoric rise to world No 1, Naomi Osaka (below) is looking forward, not back.

The Japanese star, who in January added an Australian Open title to the US Open crown she seized in September, says she’s a long way from the carefree, unseeded player who arrived here last year ranked 44th in the world.

But she’s learning to cope with the pressure of heightened expectatio­ns.

“I was just here to have fun, maybe get to the quarters,” she admitted of her mindset.

“But then I kept winning, I was like, ‘Whoa, maybe I can actually win this tournament, and I did.”

It hasn’t been a smooth progressio­n ever since, backto-back Grand Slam titles notwithsta­nding.

She went through a phase of putting pressure on herself at every tournament.

Indian Wells

Finally, she says, she “just decided to have fun again,” and set herself some mature goals.

“I just want to do the things that I practice and know that I can do well and even if things aren’t going my way try to find a way to win matches,” she said.

“I think I did that in the Australian Open. Hopefully I can refine that skill.”

Helping her work on that will be new coach Jermaine Jenkins, former hitting partner of Venus Williams and US Tennis Associatio­n national women’s coach.

Jenkins joined Osaka’s team last week after Osaka split with coach Sascha Bajin 17 days after her Australian Open triumph.

Between coaches Osaka played her first match as world No 1 and lost in Dubai to 67thranked Kristina Mladenovic.

Osaka will get a chance to avenge that defeat when she faces Mladenovic in her second-round Indian Wells opener today. –

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