Osaka blames nerves

Japanese sensation looks ahead to the Pan Pacific Open

September 17, 2018 09:01 pm | Updated 09:01 pm IST - Tokyo

  Doing things her way:  Naomi Osaka says she is ‘kind of notorious’ for her emotional reactions at trophy ceremonies.

Doing things her way: Naomi Osaka says she is ‘kind of notorious’ for her emotional reactions at trophy ceremonies.

Naomi Osaka has put her US Open tears down to shredded nerves and her natural awkwardness, rather than the tantrum thrown by Serena Williams that overshadowed a historic Japanese win.

The 20-year-old melted hearts when she burst into sobs as boos rang out following her emphatic 6-2, 6-4 thrashing of Williams in a controversial New York final a little over a week ago.

But Osaka has refused to blame her childhood idol, who called chair umpire Carlos Ramos a “thief” in an astonishing rant triggered by a code violation for coaching that culminated in a docked game.

“I feel like there was just a lot of emotions,” Osaka said here on Monday.

“I couldn’t really pinpoint it at the time, I just felt very overwhelmed.”

The row that erupted between Williams and Ramos polarised opinion and sparked a debate about sexism in tennis after the American fumed that the umpire would not have treated a male player in the same fashion.

Osaka has stayed above the fray since becoming Japan’s first Grand Slam singles champion but her tears at the trophy presentation provoked an outpouring of sympathy.

“I’m grateful that people care or sympathise but I don’t really think there was anything to be sad about,” said Osaka. “I don’t feel like I would’ve liked to savour the moment more — I think I do things my own way.”

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