San Antonio Express-News

Keys gets grip after letting go

- By Liz Clarke

For 26-year-old Madison Keys, the 2022 tennis season has been nothing short of a rebirth.

She was among the sport’s elites seven years ago, a rising star whose hellacious power and risk-it-all tactics propelled her to the semifinals of the 2015 Australian Open at 19. At 21, she reached No. 7 in the world. The next year, in 2017, she was a U.S. Open finalist.

Yet over the years since, the young woman who stood so tall on court was weighed down by her own expectatio­ns. Then came the pandemic and the enforced solitude that made the itinerant life of tennis pros even lonelier, as tournament protocols shrank her permissibl­e world to tennis courts, airplanes and hotels.

After a COVID diagnosis prevented Keys from competing in the 2021 Australian Open, it triggered what she recently described as “a kind of panic” over feeling as if she had fallen woefully behind in the chase for ranking points and titles just as the season was getting underway.

“It just felt like it was just another brick on top of another brick,” Keys said during a postmatch interview at the Australian Open. “Everything got a little bit heavier and heavier and harder to deal with.”

As a result, the prodigy who had turned pro on her 14th birthday tumbled from the top 20 in 2021 and kept tumbling, out of the top 50 and even the top 75, landing with an ignoble thud at 87th.

Though the 2022 tennis season is barely 4 weeks old, for Keys it has represente­d a triumph of hard work and newfound perspectiv­e.

In the past month, she has crawled out from under a dark cloud of her own making and win as many matches (11) as she did in all of 2021.

Her latest victory put her in the Australian Open’s semifinals — seven years after she last reached the final four in Melbourne — and a date with top-ranked Ash Barty.

Congratula­tions poured in after Keys’ 6-3, 6-2 rout of 2021 French Open champion Barbora Krejcikova on Tuesday — from longtime mentor Chris Evert, who coowns the tennis academy where the Illinois-born Keys trained as a teen; fro Martina Navratilov­a, who, like Evert, won 18 Grand Slam singles titles during a Hall of Fame career; and from fellow American Sloane Stephens, who beat Keys for the 2017 U.S. Open title. Barty paid tribute as well. “It’s so nice to have Madi

back playing her best tennis,” Barty said after trouncing Jessica Pegula 6-2, 6-0 to reach the semifinals. “She’s a top player; she deserves to be at the top of the game.”

No one is smiling bigger than Keys.

“This truly is the most fun I’ve had — and the least amount of hair-pulling-out stress,” Keys said with a laugh during her on-court interview at Rod Laver Arena.

What made the difference in her resurgence, Keys has explained, was a dramatic shift of mindset. She decided to toss out the traditiona­l metrics of tennis greatness and go back to what she loved about the sport as a child — playing from the gut and heart.

“I decided to try enjoying tennis once again and take (off ) some of that internal pressure that I was putting on myself,” Keys said. “It was honestly freezing me. I

felt like I couldn’t play at all.”

In letting go of the extreme expectatio­ns she placed on herself, Keys gained freedom that enables her to reset after a sloppy patch in a match rather than seize up with stress. That freedom also has helped her be more judicious in her shot-making and to approach rallies less like a home-run derby, in which the goal is to crush every ball, and more like a game of chess, in which a few strategic shots set up the masterstro­ke.

“(I’m) really just trying to be a lot more measured and just play within myself a little bit more — not necessaril­y trying to hit a winner,” she said. “If it happens to be a winner, then it happens to be a winner.”

Now comes her biggest hurdle — the top-ranked Barty — in a semifinal worthy of a final.

 ?? Tertius Pickard / Associated Press ?? Madison Keys, who beat Barbora Krejcikova 6-3, 6-2 to reach the Australian Open semis for the first time in seven years, credits her resurgence to easing up on herself.
Tertius Pickard / Associated Press Madison Keys, who beat Barbora Krejcikova 6-3, 6-2 to reach the Australian Open semis for the first time in seven years, credits her resurgence to easing up on herself.

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