Teen Slam champ Raducanu is still winning, learning
At this time two years ago, Emma Raducanu was participating in the Australian Open junior event – and losing in the first round.
A year ago, she was keeping tabs on Melbourne Park via TV, holed up at home in England, a teenager taking a break from the tour while studying for high school exams.
Look at her now. On Tuesday, Raducanu, still just 19, was on a show court at the year’s first Grand Slam tournament … as a reigning Grand Slam champion … facing a past Grand Slam champion … going three sets for the first time in a Grand Slam match … and pulling out the victory.
Everything has come dizzyingly quickly for someone who went from the qualifying rounds to the trophy at the U.S. Open four months ago, and yet she views herself as a work-in-progress who needs to keep building her game. If those on the outside are impatient and have outsized expectations, Raducanu sounds as if she understands the importance of taking things step by step.
“I think 2022 is all about learning for me,” she said after beating 2017 U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens, 6-0, 2-6, 6-1, in the Australian Open’s first round. “Being in those situations of, you know, winning a set and then having to fight in a decider is definitely all just accumulating into a bank of experience that I can tap into later on down the line.”
Remember: She had never even won a tour-level match before getting to the fourth round at Wimbledon in July. Then, at New York in September, Raducanu became the first qualifier to win a major championship and, at 18, the youngest female champ at a Slam since Maria Sharapova.
The player Raducanu beat in the U.S. Open final, Canada’s Leylah Fernandez, also was a teenager, also was unheralded. On Tuesday, Fernandez also was in action; she lost 6-4, 6-2 to Maddison Inglis, an Australian wildcard recipient ranked 133rd.
Like Raducanu, Fernandez did not place too much stock in one outcome.
“One of those days,” Fernandez said. That sort of level-headed thinking is vital.
“The hardest part is trying to prove that you are good enough to be where you are or good enough to stay where you are,” said Stephens, who was 19 when she reached her first major semifinal and 24 when she claimed the title in New York.
“It all is like a cycle, and I think learning how to deal with it early on is the best way to handle it, just because there’s always a lot of ups and downs in tennis.”