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Naomi Osaka Considers 'break' From Tennis During Tearful Announcement After US Open Loss 토토사이트

NEW YORK (AP) — Naomi Osaka investigated at her representative and said she needed to mention to the world what both of them had examined secretly in an Arthur Ashe Stadium corridor after her U.S. Open title guard finished with a racket-throwing, poise missing, lead-vanishing rout in the third round. 

His answer: "Sure." 

And afterward Osaka, stopping now and again as her voice got captured on her words and her eyes loaded up with tears, said Friday night she is pondering enjoying one more reprieve from tennis "for some time." 

"I feel like for me, as of late, when I win, I don't feel glad, I feel more like a consolation. And afterward when I lose, I feel exceptionally tragic," Osaka said at her news gathering following a 5-7, 7-6 (2), 6-4 misfortune at Flushing Meadows to Leylah Fernandez, a 18-year-old from Canada who is positioned 73rd and never had been this far in Grand Slam rivalry. "I don't feel that is typical." 

The arbitrator accountable for the meeting with columnists endeavored to cut things off, however Osaka said she needed to proceed. 

"This is exceptionally difficult to verbalize," she said, resting her left cheek in her grasp. "Essentially, I feel like I'm somewhat now where I'm attempting to sort out what I need to do, and I sincerely don't have the foggiest idea when I will play my next tennis match." 

Crying, she brought down her dark visor over her eyes and offered an expression of remorse, then, at that point tapped her palms on the two cheeks. 

"Better believe it," Osaka added as she rose to leave, "I believe I will put a hold on from playing for some time." 

This was the principal Slam competition for the 23-year-old Osaka since she pulled out of the French Open before the second round to take an emotional wellness break subsequent to having declared she would pass on news gatherings in Paris. 

She additionally passed on Wimbledon prior to partaking in the Tokyo Olympics, where she lit the cauldron as one of Japan's most popular competitors. 

Osaka claims four Grand Slam titles, including at the U.S. Open in 2018 — beating Serena Williams in a turbulent last — and a year prior, in addition to two favoring the hard courts of the Australian Open. At the point when she took a rest after Roland Garros, she uncovered that she suffers floods of nervousness prior to meeting with the media and has managed melancholy for a very long time. 

Throughout the last week, Osaka has composed via web-based media and spoken with regards to her considerations on the significance of self-conviction and how she needs to overlook others' assumptions. 

The main sign Friday that things were not altogether OK with Osaka came when she smacked her racket against the court subsequent to dropping one point. Minutes after the fact, Osaka hurled her hardware, sending it ricocheting and slipping most of the way to the net. Then, at that point came an all out spike close to the gauge. 

Thereafter, she contrasted that conduct with acting "similar to a young child." 

"I was advising myself to be quiet, yet I feel like perhaps there was an edge of boiling over," Osaka said. "Like, typically, I feel like I like difficulties. Yet, as of late I feel extremely restless when things don't turn out well for me, and I feel like you can feel that." 

Her game was off. Her game face was no more. Before the end, the group was booing her for turning her back to the court and taking a lot of time between focuses. 

Before sufficiently long, the No. 3-cultivated Osaka was out of the section. 

This day had that kind of energy: Earlier in Ashe, an additional 18-year-old new to this region shockingly disposed of a No. 3 seed when Carlos Alcaraz of Spain edged French Open second place Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (2), 0-6, 7-6 (5), to turn into the most youthful man into the fourth round at Flushing Meadows since Michael Chang and Pete Sampras in 1989. 

Osaka came in with a 16-match series of wins at majors. In any case, Fernandez pronounced: "Just before the match, I realized I had the option to win." 

Leylah Fernandez, of Canada, responds subsequent to overcoming Naomi Osaka, of Japan, during the third round of the US Open tennis titles, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) 

For Osaka, perhaps the time away from significant level rivalry was an issue. 

One more conceivable factor in her inability to finish things off while serving for the triumph against the left-hander Fernandez at 6-5 in the subsequent set: Osaka hadn't played a match since Monday. The typical day-on, vacation day musicality at Slams was disturbed in light of the fact that the lady Osaka should meet in the second round, Olga Danilovic, pulled out with an ailment. 

"I've never had a walkover in a Grand Slam, so that was certainly a truly unusual inclination," Osaka said. 

On Friday, Osaka was very acceptable down the stretch in the initial set. She got 12 of 13 focuses, including the last nine, with a split at adoration to go up 6-5, and a hold at affection with the assistance of a couple of pros at 112 mph and 114 mph to end it. 

She appeared to be on target for a comparative end in the subsequent set, driving 6-5 and serving. However, when Osaka cruised a forehand wide, Fernandez had her first break of the match to make it 6-all. 

"At last, I discovered an example to her serve," Fernandez said. "I just paid attention to my instinct and hit the ball." 

Thus started Osaka's descending twisting. She fell behind 5-0 in the resulting sudden death round, missing shots and showing her dissatisfaction as she at times has done previously — by throwing her racket. 

Seat umpire Alison Hughes didn't endorse Osaka then, at that point, albeit later an admonition was given for hitting a ball into the stands. 

"I wasn't actually centered around Naomi," Fernandez said. "I was just centered around myself, my game, what I expected to do." 

More forthright, Osaka was not at her best. She left the court with a white towel hung over her head after the subsequent set, then, at that point sat in her changeover seat in that equivalent square out-the-world way. 

Naomi Osaka, of Japan, covers her head between sets against Leylah Fernandez, of Canada, during the third round of the US Open tennis titles, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) 

Fernandez, grinning and holding her right clench hand overhead after the greatest of focuses, unquestionably had something to do with the result. 

She won 18 of 19 first-serve focuses — and never confronted a break point — in the third set. 

Fernandez's knee-to-the-ground, fast divert style at the standard is suggestive of another lefty, Angelique Kerber, a three-time Grand Slam champion who won the 2016 U.S. Open. 

What's more, she incidentally turns out to be the following rival for Fernandez. 

"I will put on an act as I did around evening time," Fernandez said, "and we will perceive how it goes."