‘I’m dealing with stuff’: Naomi Osaka questions her future in tennis

After crashing out of the US Open, the troubled star says she doesn’t know when she’ll play her next match

Naomi Osaka’s journey to the top took another unexpected turn on Friday when the Japanese tennis star announced she would be taking an indefinite break from the sport following her shock US Open exit.

The 23-year-old, who won the New York title in 2018 and 2020 and is considered the best hard court player in the world by some distance, made the announcement after losing in three sets to 18-year-old Leylah Fernandez at the Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“I think I’m going to take a break from playing for a while,” Osaka said at a tearful post-match press conference. “This is very hard to articulate. Basically, I feel like I’m kind of at this point where I’m trying to figure out what I want to do, and I honestly don’t know when I’m going to play my next tennis match. Sorry.”

Osaka later said she felt emotionally conflicted whether she won or lost. “I feel like for me, recently, when I win I don’t feel happy. I feel more like a relief. And then, when I lose, I feel very sad. I don’t think that’s normal. I didn’t really want to cry.”

But she said she didn’t feel that the occasion or her opponent was the issue, noting that she’d been able to return better players’ serves and had played “in this situation before”.

“I guess we’re all dealing with some stuff, but I know that I’m dealing with some stuff,” Osaka added.

Her withdrawal from the sport was a surprise finale to her first grand slam on the tennis circuit after withdrawing from the French Open and Wimbledon due to mental health issues.

The effect of those decisions could be seen in her form at the Tokyo Olympics. Asked whether pressure was a part of it, she said: “Yes and no.”

Entering Friday’s match, two days after the city was slammed by Hurricane Ida, Osaka had won 16 straight Grand Slam matches. But her game declined when things started to go Fernandez’s way on the court. Three times she slammed her racket down and walked off the court with a towel over her head without telling the umpire after losing a tie-break. Overall, she tallied 36 unforced errors on the night.

Osaka’s decision to step back from the game is bound to raise further questions over psychological pressures young athletes are facing, and the corresponding effect on mental health and performance in a year when “the 24-hour rolling hell of Big Sport” has itself been repeatedly interrupted and restarted, sometimes with and sometimes without the energy of spectators.

In July, US gymnastics superstar Simone Biles pulled out of some Tokyo Olympics gymnastics events, later saying that she had decided to prioritise her mind over the will – and enormous pressure – to win. “There is more to life than just gymnastics,” she said, returning to win bronze on the beam. Biles said she was inspired by Osaka, who had said she withdrew from this year’s French Open to ease her anxiety and depression.

Competitors in other sports have made similar decisions, among them cricketer Ben Stokes who stepped back from the game to prioritise his mental wellbeing. Aston Villa centre-back Tyrone Mings, who described his anxiety before Euro 2020, said he’d sought psychological techniques “to stop letting your subconscious take over”.

Studies on the pressure to perform has divided cognitive psychologists over the merits of what they term “mindfulness” – in a sense, intense mental concentration – and its opposite, to be mindless.

A study in Scientific American last week described a state of “automaticity”, or mental processes that can be executed without paying attention to them.

In some instances, authors said, “paying too much attention to what you’re doing can have damaging effects, particularly when you perform well-practised skills”. The message from research, they concluded, “is that focusing too carefully on the execution of well-practised motor sequences can cause mistakes”.

But as the mental health challenges of athletic performance at the highest level becomes more apparent, Osaka’s comments on Friday offered still more insight. Referring to throwing her racket on the court, she said: “I’m really sorry about that. I’m not really sure why. I was telling myself to be calm, but I feel like maybe there was a boiling point.

“Normally I feel like I like challenges. But recently I feel very anxious when things don’t go my way, and I feel like you can feel that. I’m not really sure why it happens the way it happens now.

“You could kind of see that,” she added. “I was kind of like a little kid.”

Contributor

Edward Helmore

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Tearful Naomi Osaka questions future after US Open loss to Leylah Fernandez
Naomi Osaka’s defense of her US Open title is in tatters and her immediate future on the WTA tour in doubt after a shocking defeat to Leylah Fernandez

Bryan Armen Graham at Flushing Meadows

04, Sep, 2021 @5:40 AM

Article image
Museums on prescription: Brussels tests cultural visits to treat anxiety
Psychiatrists in the city can now prescribe free visits to cultural venues to complement other treatments

Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

17, Sep, 2022 @1:00 PM

Article image
Simone Biles and Naomi Osaka highlight the untenable pressures of Big Sport | Barney Ronay
For those in sport today, pressures are untenable amid an endlessly hostile kind of unregulated social experiment

Barney Ronay in Tokyo

27, Jul, 2021 @8:01 PM

Article image
Our mental health is fracturing. Here’s what I wish I’d done...
Britain is failing to cope with unprecedented levels of depression. But we can take action to make our own lives better

Mark Rice-Oxley

22, Jul, 2018 @4:59 AM

Article image
Country music twins Ward Thomas warn fans of social media addiction
Bestselling UK act say they plan to step back from the distracting ‘quick fix’ on their phones

Vanessa Thorpe

30, Dec, 2018 @8:59 AM

Article image
The doctor will serenade you now: surgery prescribes tunes as tonics
People in Ambleside, Cumbria will be offered ‘musical paracetamol’ in trial that tries to use power of song to lift mood

Donna Ferguson

02, Nov, 2019 @1:05 PM

Article image
‘I got a brain injury and a life sentence’: the hidden legacy of male violence against women
The effects of head trauma on athletes are well documented. Finally, a UK study is examining the long-term brain health of females abused by their partner

Yvonne Roberts

02, Apr, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
Concern as a third of NHS mental health treatments shift online
Charities say some patients will struggle to access the help they need

Rosie Taylor

02, Jul, 2023 @8:00 AM

Article image
Forget drugs and booze: stars use therapists to cope with stress
Scathing reviews, stage fright and bullying peers lead to anxiety and depression among many performers

Jamie Doward

13, Nov, 2016 @12:04 AM

Article image
Young people overeating as they battle lockdown anxiety, says UK study
Mental health issues among teenagers and young adults are on the rise since start of pandemic, research reveals

Sonia Sodha and James Tapper

12, Jul, 2020 @6:19 AM