Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Osaka grinds out Aussie title, halfway to Grand Slam sweep

Beats Kvitova, will take No. 1 ranking

- By Howard Fendrich

MELBOURNE, Australia — Like the 21-year-old she is, Naomi Osaka stepped into Rod Laver Arena for the Australian Open final with a cellphone in her right hand and music in both ears.

The headphones she wore carried the swirling brass, bouncing beat and boastful lyrics of Jay Rock’s “Win,” the same pre-match song Osaka listened to throughout the tournament — and at last year’s U.S. Open, too.

“You might wanna keep score,” the rapper says. “I win, win, win, win.”

Right now, that’s how Osaka is living at tennis’ most important events. Her championsh­ip at Melbourne Park, via a 7-6 (2), 5-7, 6-4 victory over Petra Kvitova on Saturday night (Australian time), gave Osaka two straight Grand Slam trophies.

Just a few hours later, she found herself discussing such matters as what her goals are now — answer: winning the upcoming hard-court stops in Indian Wells and Miami — and whether it’s too soon to think about being halfway to collecting four consecutiv­e majors.

“The way the tennis world is, there’s always the next tournament, the next Slam, and we all just want to keep training hard and winning more,” said Osaka, who was born in Japan and moved to the U.S. at age 3. “So I’m not really sure if I’m satisfied.”

Heady stuff for someone who already has accomplish­ed so much in such a short amount of time.

A year ago, Osaka was ranked 72nd.

She had lost by the third round in seven of her eight appearance­s at

Grand Slam tournament­s. The lone exception was a fourth-round run at the Australian Open in January 2018. That’s as far as she’d been by then. So Osaka was getting impatient. Look at her now.

She is the first woman with backto-back major championsh­ips since Serena Williams — the player Osaka beat in the U.S. Open final last September — captured four in a row from 2014 to 2015.

Osaka also guaranteed that she will ascend to No. 1 in the WTA rankings for the first time on Monday, making her the youngest player to hold the top spot since Caroline Wozniacki was 20 in 2010.

Osaka beat a trio of top-10 women on her way to the title.

In the final against Kvitova, she pulled herself together after failing to convert three championsh­ip points at 5-3 in the second set, much as she ignored all the chaos surroundin­g the final against Williams at Flushing Meadows.

“As a whole, this tournament was very eye-opening for me,” Osaka said as Saturday turned to Sunday in Melbourne. “I had a lot of matches that were very tough and I was behind in some of them. I think it showed me that I could win matches from behind, just on willpower alone.”

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press ?? Japan’s Naomi Osaka, with the Australian Open’s women’s singles championsh­ip trophy, walks to a post-match news conference Saturday night in Melbourne.
Mark Schiefelbe­in The Associated Press Japan’s Naomi Osaka, with the Australian Open’s women’s singles championsh­ip trophy, walks to a post-match news conference Saturday night in Melbourne.

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