Australian Open 2021: Katie Boulter exits as Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams cruise through first round
Boulter disappointed after failing to deliver on promising build-up to the tournament in Melbourne
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Your support makes all the difference.Katie Boulter was upset with her performance in a first-round loss to Daria Kasatkina at the Australian Open. Boulter came into the tournament with confidence high after a strong week last week, claiming two victories at the Gippsland Trophy and taking a set off Naomi Osaka. That raised hopes the 24-year-old British number nine could make an impression at the year's first grand slam but she was caught cold and fell to a 6-1 6-4 defeat by Kasatkina.
Boulter said: "I'm pretty disappointed with today. I felt like I never really got going, I felt quite uncomfortable out on the court. I put a lot of pressure on myself when really there was absolutely no need to. The conditions were slightly different today, it felt heavier, the ball was bouncing higher. She has a different kind of swing to a lot of girls and I really struggled to just get some rhythm and get into the match and compete. I'm pretty upset about it."
The first set lasted just 23 minutes, with Boulter spraying 18 unforced errors compared to just two winners. She began to find a foothold in the second set and saved four match points in fighting back from 2-5 to 4-5 only to drop serve again.
A back injury in 2019 after she had broken into the top 100 was hugely unfortunate and Boulter now finds herself having to work her way back up from her current mark of 315. Travel restrictions mean putting together a schedule that will enable her to play as much as possible is a difficult challenge, but Boulter remains confident she can work her way back towards the top of the game.
"I've worked so hard on my body so firstly I really hope that I'm going to stay fit, I believe that I am, and that's my number one goal for this year as it is any year," she said. "But, as I kind of feel like I showed last week - unfortunately not this week - the game is there to beat some of these top players and I just feel like I have to maintain it longer, I have to get stronger, I have to get better and it will come out when it feels like coming out. It always does. The more positive weeks that I get, then the more I feel like I'll get toward my goal. I believe that I'll get there eventually and I will keep working hard."
Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka made flying starts to their Australian Open campaigns. The city's mixed feelings about the tournament were evident in sparse crowds at Melbourne Park but that did not bother seven-time champion Williams or title favourite Osaka.
Wearing a striking one-legged catsuit that she later revealed was inspired by 1980s athletics star Florence Griffith Joyner, Williams brushed aside Germany's Laura Siegemund 6-1 6-1 in just 56 minutes. The 39-year-old made a nervous start to her 100th match at the tournament, dropping serve in the opening game, but won the next 10 to ease through to a second-round clash with Nina Stojanovic.
Williams had pulled out of last week's warm-up event with a shoulder problem, and said: "I was happy just to get through it. I wasn't sure how my serve would be after a little bit of that shoulder, but it's feeling good, I'm feeling good."
She rushed off court to watch another evergreen athlete, Tom Brady, win his seventh Super Bowl with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at the age of 43. "I just was watching as much as I could to see," she said. "My only word is it's unbelievable. I kept saying, 'This is unbelievable, this is unreal'."
It was a successful day for the Williams family, with Venus claiming her first victory at a grand slam since 2019. The 40-year-old, who is playing in a record 88th grand slam main draw, defeated 35-year-old Kirsten Flipkens 7-5 6-2.
Like Williams, Osaka withdrew from last week's warm-up event with a shoulder problem but she made it clear it was precautionary and was in fine fettle in a 6-1 6-2 victory over Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. Pavlyuchenkova had reached the quarter-finals in three of the past four years but Osaka was simply far too sharp, winning the opening four games and barely putting a foot wrong.
On what appeared to be a tough draw, Osaka said: "It's always really hard to play someone that good in the first round. I feel like it might have also helped in a way because I calmed my nerves because I felt like I couldn't afford to be that nervous."
The victory extended Osaka's winning run, stretching back a year, to 15 matches, and she cited last year's defeat by Coco Gauff in Melbourne as a turning point in her mental approach. The third seed, who won her third slam title at the US Open last summer, said: "I think just after losing here to Coco, because she is sort of the person that I never wanted to lose to in this situation, just being the defending champion, losing to her in such a high-profile match, I think it really shocked me.
"I actually played a match in Fed Cup in Spain that I don't know if a lot of people knew about (losing 6-0 6-3 to Sara Sorribes Tormo). There's just a lot of stuff that happened there, surrounding that time, that it really made me think a lot about my life and what is the reason - am I playing tennis to prove stuff to other people or am I playing to have fun because I enjoy it?"
French Open champion Iga Swiatek has been wrestling with the different pressures of being a grand slam winner but the Pole negotiated her first hurdle successfully, beating Arantxa Rus 6-1 6-3. Three-time grand slam winner Angelique Kerber was a shock casualty though. The German, one of 72 players to endure a hard quarantine, lost the first nine games in a 6-0 6-4 defeat by Bernarda Pera.
There was a notable victory, meanwhile, for Canadian qualifier Rebecca Marino. The 30-year-old was playing her first grand slam main draw match for eight years after stepping away from the sport in 2013 for mental health reasons, and her 6-0 7-6 (9) victory over Kimberly Birrell was her first at this level for a decade.
Marino said: "I feel a lot more confident in my playing ability and my mental strength and fortitude. I feel like I still have my big serve and my forehand but a lot of it was between my ears, just fighting for every point, having a confidence that I know I belong here again."
PA
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