Tag: Tennis player

  • Injured Serena Williams bids adieu to Wimbledon in tears

    Injured Serena Williams bids adieu to Wimbledon in tears

    Tennis ace Serena Williams bids adieu to Wimbledon in tears on Tuesday after her latest bid for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam singles crown ended in injury.

    The seven-time Wimbledon winner was clearly in pain on a slippery Centre Court and sought treatment while 3-2 up in her first-round match against unseeded Belarussian Aliaksandra Sasnovich.

    Williams returned after a lengthy break but her distress was evident. She grimaced and wiped away tears before preparing to serve at 3-3 after Sasnovich had pulled back from 3-1 down.

    The 39-year-old American tennis star, who had started the match with strapping on her right thigh, then let out a shriek and sank kneeling to the grass sobbing, before being helped off the court with an apparent ankle injury.

    “Brutal for @serenawilliams but centre court is extremely slippy out there. Not easy to move out there,” Britain’s Andy Murray said on Twitter.

    Eight-times men’s singles champion Roger Federer expressed shock at Williams’ departure and voiced concern about the surface, with the roof closed on Centre Court on a rainy afternoon.

    His first-round opponent Adrian Mannarino of France also retired with a knee injury after a slip in the match immediately before Williams’.

    “I do feel it feels a tad more slippery maybe under the roof. I don’t know if it’s just a gut feeling. You do have to move very, very carefully out there. If you push too hard in the wrong moments, you do go down,” said Federer.

    Williams has been a Wimbledon finalist in her last four appearances but her bid to equal Margaret Court’s record 24 Grand Slam singles titles remains stalled since her last Grand Slam win in Australia in 2017.

    With the absence this year of world number two Naomi Osaka and third-ranked Simona Halep, it was a golden opportunity for Williams. With Williams out of Wimbledon, 18-time Grand Slam champion Chrissie Evert says, “It’s anybody’s tournament.”

  • Osaka deserves support, not backlash

    Osaka deserves support, not backlash

    “It is a part of your job.” “You are being paid millions of dollars each year.” “You are a privileged brat who is exploiting and trivialising mental health.”

    These are some of the profoundly hysterical responses by a slew of callous simpletons that tennis star Naomi Osaka had to endure after her decision to not attend the press conferences because of mental health struggles.

    In an ideal world, board officials should have addressed Osaka’s concerns, done what they could do to help her in her bouts against anxiety, and applaud her for mustering up the courage to prioritise her mental health. Instead, she was pilloried, fined 15 grand, and threatened with suspension following which she announced to withdraw from the French Open.

    It is worth a mention that Naomi didn’t refuse to take questions on the court following her victory in the first-round match, which means that she was setting a boundary on how much time she can give to the media to protect her mental health. Attending press conferences or answering media questions might be an athlete’s obligation but they can be taxing. This is not to suggest cutting journalists’ access to players at all but the point at issue is whether press conferences are banal or do they offer anything relevant to the game.

    In his column for The Guardian, Jonathan Liew writes, “The modern press conference is no longer a meaningful exchange but really a lowest‑common‑denominator transaction: a cynical and often predatory game in which the object is to mine as much content from the subject as possible.” 

    In addition to this, other journalists who have attended numerous press conferences were also of the view that these conferences are superfluous.

    Lindsay Andler, The Athletic’s reporter for New York Yankees, tweeted; “We don’t *want* press conferences. We want to talk to people in person, like human beings. The reality TV-ification of press availability is an annoyance to me.”

    Pakistan’s Ahmer Naqvi also took to Twitter to post a thread about the banality of press conferences and how majority of the cricket press conferences he has attended have been useless.

    “Other than incredibly lazy questions, the only alternative is cynical types looking to pounce on anything that can be spun to be controversial,” Ahmer tweeted. “There are a handful of journos who want to ask interesting things, but the players are so scared of being quoted out of context that they will (understandably) give a generic answer that covers all bases.”

    If any athlete or even Naomi in this case would have excused themselves from any obligation because of a physical injury like a wrist or leg injury, there would have been no furore. This triggers a pertinent question: why is then Osaka getting so muck flak over mental health struggles? All of the criticism of Naomi Osaka stems mainly from the pernicious misconception that athletes are immune to mental breakdowns. As a consequence, many athletes are reluctant to come forward and speak about mental health issues because of the stigma attached to mental problems. 

    English presenter Charlie Webster is doing an incredible job to lay this misconception to rest by inviting current and retired athletes to her podcast, ‘My Sporting Mind’, where they talk about their mental wellbeing journey.

    Governing bodies often wax lyrical about how they care for the athletes and their mental health but this Naomi episode is a damning indictment of their utter disregard for the mental health of players. Also, a tip of the hat to Naomi for not cowing down to the pressure by board officials and showing that mental health and self-care comes ahead of everything else.

  • ‘Huge waves of anxiety,’ Naomi Osaka withdraws from French Open

    ‘Huge waves of anxiety,’ Naomi Osaka withdraws from French Open

    Japanese tennis ace Naomi Osaka has withdrawn from the French Open due to “huge waves of anxiety.”

    Osaka announced her withdrawal from Roland Garros a day after she was fined $15,000 by the French Open and warned that she could face expulsion from the tournament, following her decision not to speak with the press during the tournament.

    Osaka, 23, who won her first match against Patricia Maria Tig, was scheduled to face Ana Bogdan in the second round. She released a statement last Wednesday stating her intention to skip her media obligations during Roland Garros because of the affect of interacting with the press on her mental health.

    “This isn’t a situation I ever imagined or intended when I posted a few days ago,” Osaka wrote on social media, “I think now the best thing for the tournament, the other players and my well-being is that I withdraw so that everyone can get back to focusing on the tennis going on in Paris.”

    “I never wanted to be a distraction and I accept that my timing was not ideal and my message could have been clearer. More importantly, I would never trivialise mental health or use the term lightly.”

    In her original statement, Osaka said she expected to be fined. The French Tennis Federation (FFT) President Gilles Moretton, has stated that his organisation would penalise Osaka, after which she was fined $15,000.

    The organisation has not given an official response to the fine, despite Osaka’s statement, explaining her anxiety. Their heavy-handed approach to Osaka has been criticised as a disproportionate response by many, saying that Osaka should not be penalised for putting her mental health first. The attention Osaka received after her statement has been compounded by the announcement of her fine and possible default.

    In her withdrawal statement, the four-time grand slam champion said she has suffered from “long bouts of depression” since the 2018 US Open final. Osaka defeated Serena Williams then to win her first grand slam title in a controversial match that similarly led to significant attention and queries from the media.

    “Anyone that knows me knows I’m introverted, and anyone that has seen me at the tournaments will notice that I’m often wearing headphones as that helps dull my social anxiety,” Osaka wrote.

    Osaka explained in her statement, saying she suffers “huge waves of anxiety” before speaking with the media. “Here in Paris, I was already feeling vulnerable and anxious so I thought it was better to exercise self‑care and skip the press conferences. I announced it preemptively because I do feel like the rules are quite outdated in parts and I wanted to highlight that,” she wrote.

    “I’ll see you when I see you,” concluded Naomi.

    Osaka has received support from numerous public figures since her announcement.

  • Sania Mirza seeks help from Indian sports ministry for son’s UK visa

    Sania Mirza seeks help from Indian sports ministry for son’s UK visa

    Indian tennis star Sania Mirza has sought help from the Indian Sports Ministry after her son, Izhaan Mirza-Malik, was denied a visa by United Kingdom (UK) authorities. 

    Mirza, who will be playing a couple of tournaments in the coming days in the UK, has been facing a dilemma after her two-year-old son and his caretaker were denied a visa, owing to travel restrictions imposed by the UK on Indian nationals. 

    The tennis sensation is scheduled to compete in the Nottingham Open (from June 6), Birmingham Open (from June 14), the Eastbourne Open (from June 20) and the Wimbledon (from June 28).

    The sports ministry said it was approached by Mirza, who said she could not leave a two-year-old child behind to take part in a month-long tournament. 

    “Sania, who is a part of the Sports Ministry’s Target Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS), approached the Ministry requesting help with the visa of her son and his caretaker. Sania stated that she cannot leave a two-year-old child behind as she travels for a month,” said the ministry in a statement. 

    The ministry said it dispatched a letter to the Ministry of External Affairs in India, asking it to take the matter up on an urgent basis with the UK authorities through the Indian embassy in London.

    Read more – Sania Mirza is a ‘proud mumma’ after Izhaan Mirza Malik fluently recites his duas

    “The request was immediately taken up by the Sports Ministry and a letter has already been sent to MEA requesting them to take up the matter in the UK through the Indian Embassy in London,” stated the Indian ministry. 

    Indian Sports Minister Kiren Rijiju expressed the hope that the UK will allow Mirza to travel with her child. 

    Rijiju, in a statement, said, “I have approved the request and Sports Ministry officials have initiated the process with the MEA. We are hopeful that the UK Government will see merit in this case and allow the child to travel with Sania.”