Naomi Osaka

2022 - 3 - 13

tennis indian wells tennis indian wells

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Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

Fan abuse of Naomi Osaka was idiotic – and increasingly common ... (The Guardian)

The four-time grand slam champion was reduced to tears by a heckler at Indian Wells. But abuse from the stands appears to be on the increase.

Osaka has been struggling to deal with the demands of being in the spotlight and she’s had a very rough 12 months. One of the greatest athletes on the planet, who no doubt has accomplished more and worked harder for such than the woman who felt it was OK to yell such a thing. In soccer, England players were racially abused by their own ‘supporters’ after their loss at last year’s European Championship; the NBA has banned fans for confronting players at games; and NFL players were booed during a moment of silence to acknowledge inequality. And, indeed, the sisters had already faced off on a bigger stage when Venus defeated Serena in the semi-finals of Wimbledon in 2000, just eight months prior. And while Richard Williams left himself open for criticism with his highly unconventional – and extraordinarily successful – coaching techniques, the thought that the sisters would conspire and rob the event of fair competition was a stretch. Naomi Osaka’s emotional, tear-filled comments after she was heckled during her second-round loss in Indian Wells on Saturday immediately drew comparisons to the infamous incident at the same tournament in 2001 when the Williams sisters were mercilessly – and unjustly - booed.

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Image courtesy of "Sports Illustrated"

We Should Put Naomi Osaka's Well-Being First, Not Take Sides in a ... (Sports Illustrated)

After being heckled by a fan at Indian Wells, it seems fair and reasonable to ask whether the women's tennis star could use more time away to find answers ...

At best, it’s a sign people are invested in the product. There was nothing out of the ordinary about a top-tier athlete getting thrown off her game by a lone heckler. By Osaka’s own admissions over the past year, conflict and confrontation can cause her anxiety. The news is we’ve produced a culture that celebrates weakness and victimhood.” On the other baseline: Anything other than full-throated and unconditional support for Osaka was found lacking in empathy and sympathy. On Saturday, she was playing her second match at Indian Wells, against Russian Veronika Kudermetova. Early in the match, a fan yelled, “You suck.” (That she implied it was motivated by racial animus made it all the more fraught.) She has hauled in more than $100 million in endorsements and lit the torch at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. And still, she is unsettled by conflict and confrontation and partisan fans. She then referenced a previous moment of heckling at Indian Wells. It was not her match from 2018. But he brought with him the same sensibilities he would to a Rams or Dodgers or Lakers game and began to yap at the opponent. Vickery—a young American inspired by the Williams sisters and who came to tennis not via country clubs but when her grandmother bought her a racket at a Dollar Store—brought a considerable fan section to this big match. And the tournament. It takes place in Indian Wells, Calif., at the BNP Paribas Open. Naomi Osaka was on one side of the net.

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Image courtesy of "Defector"

Naomi Osaka's Half-Measures May Not Be Working | Defector (Defector)

Naomi Osaka leaves the court in tears after her second-round loss at Indian Wells. Clive Brunskill/Getty Images. Naomi Osaka's history at ...

What’s relevant is that Osaka is still drawing that connection in her mind, mid-match, upon hearing the kind of nondescript remark she has likely brushed off dozens of times in the past. As a competitor, she’s a long way from the mindset that wins seven matches in a row, the high standard she’s set for herself. Osaka asked to use the mic to address the crowd—a long shot—and was denied. After Osaka dropped her first service game, a heckler in the crowd shouted, “Naomi, you suck!” Osaka asked the chair umpire to eject the heckler from the crowd, and the umpire declined. She thanked them, and explained that the heckling caused her to replay in her mind the infamous, stadium-wide booing of the Williams family in 2001, which traumatized the sisters so deeply that they refused to compete at Indian Wells for over a decade. When she returned to the desert in 2019, she was already the No. 1 player on tour.

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Image courtesy of "Tennis World"

Pam Shriver gives thoughts on Naomi Osaka being heckled in ... (Tennis World)

Former American tennis star Pam Shriver showed empathy for Naomi Osaka after what went down during her Indian Wells Masters second round match.

Shriver is hoping what went down in Indian Wells won't leave a long lasting impact on Osaka and that she will be able to continue competing as scheduled. "Fans can be brutal sometimes and they can be mean, but in an individual sport like tennis, it affects players differently, and I just hope that it doesn't set her back to not wanting to play again. "There has been a lot of discussion in the last 24 hours about what happened to Naomi Osaka last night.

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Image courtesy of "kuna noticias y kuna radio"

Tennis fans react to moment when Naomi Osaka was heckled by ... (kuna noticias y kuna radio)

Tennis star, Naomi Osaka, was rattled during her match at BNP Paribas Open on Saturday night after a woman in the stands yelled “Naomi, you suck!”.

“We put intense amounts of pressure and scrutiny on athletes to perform. Spectators reacted to the derogatory remark and Osaka asked the chair umpire to ask that something be done. The undercurrent of racism was painful, confusing and unfair. How can we as people from the outside help? When Venus and their father Richard took their seats to watch Serena in the final against Kim Clijsters, the crowd began booing. The Williams sisters were heckled by fans at Indian Wells in 2001.

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Image courtesy of "CBSSports.com"

Naomi Osaka cries after being heckled by fan during match at Indian ... (CBSSports.com)

Osaka wanted to address the crowd shortly after the heckler yelled at her, but was denied by the umpire.

That came after Osaka refused to participate in post-match press conferences during the Grand Slam tournament. "I just want to say, 'Thank you,'" Osaka said after the match. She even pulled out of the French Open in order to take a mental health break.

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Image courtesy of "Los Angeles Times"

Bad trend continues as Naomi Osaka deals with verbal harassment (Los Angeles Times)

Tennis star Naomi Osaka was brought to tears Saturday night by a heckler at Indian Wells. It's important to understand why she was so upset.

I want her to play. We want to see her play. Before the tournament began, Osaka said she felt like she was at peace with herself. That leads to the sports equivalent of road rage, where fans take out their hostility on the nearest target. I want her to be happy. Navratilova also said Osaka would have to “toughen it out somehow” in the future and said Black players Althea Gibson, Chanda Rubin and Zina Garrison had endured tougher experiences in the sport than Osaka has had. Did long months of COVID isolation make us forget how to behave in public and play in the sandbox with other people? The sisters said they were traumatized and stayed away from an event that prides itself as being just a small step below the four Grand Slam events in popularity and stature. Retired tennis great Martina Navratilova called it “heartbreaking” that someone would insult Osaka and also that Osaka had been affected so deeply. “Naomi, you suck!” came the cry from above the court in Stadium 1 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. Osaka, who has been admirably open about battling depression and took a long mental-health break last year, became tearful and agitated. The words had a piercing clarity in the silence dictated by tennis custom. Lakers teammate Carmelo Anthony asked for the ejection of two fans at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia after he said they called him “boy.” Austin Rivers of the Denver Nuggets, angered by insults targeting his family during a game in Oklahoma City, had two fans ejected from their courtside seats.

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Image courtesy of "Deadspin"

Tennis doesn't want Naomi Osaka around (Deadspin)

Naomi Osaka loves tennis, but tennis doesn't seem to love her back. Osaka is in the news again, and again, it's not for something she's accomplished on the court, but for something that's happened to her at her workplace. Over the weekend, Osaka lost ...

Ironically enough, between the dominance of the Williams sisters and Osaka’s transcendence, tennis is the only global sport that’s been ruled by Black women for the last three decades and counting. “In my last match, the semifinals, I was set to play my sister, but Venus had tendinitis and had to pull out. So if Indian Wells damaged Williams, you can only guess what Osaka went through on Saturday, triggered by the flashback of what happened to Venus and Serena when she was only three years old. I think I’m going to take a break from playing for a while,” she said. Osaka is in the news again, and again, it’s not for something she’s accomplished on the court, but for something that’s happened to her at her workplace. In January, we were reminded of when Novak Djokovic took an unnecessary shot at Osaka last spring because she wanted to pay a fine rather than do press conferences after matches. The visual of a young Black and Asian woman being treated this way, in the same place where Venus and Serena Williams were once belittled, can’t be ignored. It’s just a cog in the system. “I walked out onto the court, the crowd immediately started jeering and booing,” Serena Williams wrote for Time Magazine in 2015 about what happened to her at Indian Wells in 2001. “I remember sitting in the bathroom thinking, ‘Wait, I’m not gonna go back. “But [being] heckled here, I watched a video of Venus and Serena [Williams] getting heckled here, and if you’ve never watched it, you should watch it. Osaka requested that the fan be removed and even wanted to address the crowd, but she wasn’t allowed to do so until after the match.

Naomi Osaka Brought to Tears by Heckler at Indian Wells (unknown)

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Crying on court after being heckled by a spectator, Naomi Osaka was knocked out of the BNP Paribas Open in the second round on ...

Serena Williams won in three sets but has said that the experience was traumatic and “haunted” her and her family for years. When Venus withdrew from the semifinal against Serena only minutes before it was to begin, citing tendinitis in her right knee, the crowd responded by booing. At Indian Wells in 2001, the Russian player Elena Dementieva spoke about her suspicion publicly after losing to Venus Williams in the quarterfinals.

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Image courtesy of "The Washington Post"

Naomi Osaka brought to tears by heckler during loss at Indian Wells (The Washington Post)

The ugly experience of Serena and Venus Williams in the tournament years ago "went into my head," Naomi Osaka told fans.

It reminded me how far the sport has come, and how far I’ve come, too. Richard Williams said at the time that he was called the n-word. But her comments showed that the Williams sisters’ experience in the tournament in 2001 lingers. Her answer wasn’t definitive and, when Serena stepped onto the court to play Kim Clijsters in the final, the crowd got nasty. Unseeded in Indian Wells, Osaka has dropped from No. 1 in the world to 78th. She also missed Wimbledon but returned for the Tokyo Olympics, where, playing for Japan, she faced enormous pressure and lost in the third round.

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