Houston Chronicle

Osaka advances to semifinals

Winner of match between Serena, Halep looms next

- By Karen Crouse

MELBOURNE, Australia — The tennis court becomes a fun house mirror when the player across the net is Hsieh Su-wei, the queen of the overhead drop shot, whose wicked spins, clever angles and two-handed shots from both sides can rattle her opponents.

Naomi Osaka, a threetime Grand Slam champion, sighed audibly Sunday when informed that her reward for fending off two match points against Garbine Muguruza was a meeting with Hsieh, who clinched her place in the quarterfin­als while Osaka was struggling to solve the problem that was Muguruza.

“She’s one of those players that, for me, if it was a video game, I would want to select her character just to play her,” Osaka, the 2019 champion, said. “Because my mind can’t fathom the choices she makes when she’s on the court.”

Osaka, 23, added, “It’s not fun to play her, but it’s really fun to watch.”

Hsieh, 35, is more accomplish­ed in doubles, where she and her partner, Barbora Strycova, arrived at Melbourne Park as the top seeds and exited in the second round. A three-time Grand Slam champion in doubles, Hsieh had never advanced to the quarterfin­als in singles in 37 prior Grand Slam singles main draw appearance­s.

“She’s probably going to smash me on the court,” Hsieh said cheerfully. “I try to play my game, do my job, see what happens.”

In their midday match Tuesday, played in bright sunshine, Hsieh earned three break points in the first set. She wasn’t able to convert any of them, and after wriggling out of those tight spots Osaka rolled to a 6-2, 6-2 victory in 66 minutes.

Hsieh has a resting happy face, but behind the smile lurks a steely competitor. She has played Osaka five times, and four of the matches have gone three sets, including Hsieh’s lone win, in the third round in Miami in 2019 when Osaka was the world No. 1.

Asked what makes playing Hsieh such a challenge, Osaka said, “Have you watched her play?” She laughed. “It’s like, ‘What?’ ”

She added, “I know that for me, whenever I play her I just have to expect everything.”

The showdown between Hsieh of Taiwan and Osaka of Japan is a study in contrasts. Osaka creates pace and Hsieh redirects it. Osaka is a marketing magnet who added Louis Vuitton, Tag Heuer and Workday to her endorsemen­t portfolio before the Australian Open. Hsieh has no sponsors, partly by design.

“I’d rather stay simple,” said Hsieh, whose tournament routine of shopping for discounted tennis wear has been upended by the statewide lockdown instituted last week.

As embodied by Osaka, the power game is in vogue. But Hsieh’s more refined style will never go out of fashion. She is an artist that turns convention on its head with an unusual vision that gives the court its shape, the way a Bundt pan gives shape to the batter poured into it.

“I think she has incredible hands and incredible eyes,” said Serena Williams’ coach, Patrick Mouratoglo­u. “She sees the ball very early, seeing and anticipati­ng a lot.”

That’s why she has such an economy of movement, he added, “and why she’s so difficult to play.”

For the past three weeks, the tricky job of preparing the crafty Hsieh for her matches has fallen to Andrew Whittingto­n, who advanced to the semifinals in men’s doubles at the 2017 Australian Open and has cracked the top 200 in singles.

On a sunny Monday on Court 17, hard against the tram tracks on the eastern periphery of the grounds, Whittingto­n spent close to an hour feeding Hsieh the hard, flat, well-placed serves that are Osaka’s signature.

Hsieh’s coach, Paul McNamee, instructed Whittingto­n to hold nothing back. After Hsieh failed to get her racket on a ball to her backhand, McNamee sidled up to Hsieh and said she would be seeing that serve a lot from Osaka.

Hsieh nodded solemnly. Seconds later, she lifted a ball off the court with her racket, turned her back to the net and hit a no-look rainbow shot back to Whittingto­n, who could only laugh.

McNamee described Hsieh as a free spirit and said: “You don’t want to box that spirit. You’ve got to let it rise and be free.”

Laughing, McNamee added, “I’ve learned the joy of silence a lot working with Su-wei.”

An entertaine­r who wields her racket like a magician’s prop, Hsieh is sorry that the lockdown will shut out fans through Wednesday — and perhaps longer.

“I think I just stay the same, enjoy, try to be positive,” she said. “If I don’t win, I hope quarantine finishes very soon so I can go out to enjoy a little bit.”

In the third round of the 2019 Australian Open, Osaka defeated Hsieh, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1.

It is not a pleasant memory.

“I just remember having, like, so many emotions just because I felt like there wasn’t a lot of things I could control while I was playing her,” Osaka said.

It is Hsieh’s greatest strength. She can make the best, most powerful players feel helpless, and for a few games in the first set Tuesday, she had Osaka back on her heels.

 ?? Paul Crock / Getty Images ?? Naomi Osaka had faced her quarterfin­als opponent, Hsieh Su-wei, five times before. Though she won four of those matches, she says they were tricky.
Paul Crock / Getty Images Naomi Osaka had faced her quarterfin­als opponent, Hsieh Su-wei, five times before. Though she won four of those matches, she says they were tricky.

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