'It's all good': Barty romps
through after stuttering start
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[January 20, 2020]
By Nick Mulvenney
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - World number one
Ash Barty made a stuttering start to her bid to end her country's
long wait for a homegrown Australian Open champion on Monday before
calming the nerves of her compatriots with an emphatic 5-7 6-1 6-1
victory over Lesia Tsurenko.
After rain had washed out a big chunk of the day on the outer
courts, it looked like Barty might serve up the dampest squib of a
start to a tournament desperate for good news after a week of
headlines about poor air quality.
The French Open champion had won her first WTA title on home soil at
the Adelaide International on Saturday and local hopes were high
that she might deliver a first Australian champion at the Grand Slam
since Chris O'Neil in 1978.
She was brought crashing down to earth in the opening set, however,
when Tsurenko, who won their only previous meeting in Brisbane in
2018, comfortably bridged the 119 spots that separate the two in the
world rankings.
The Ukrainian, returning after an elbow injury cut short her 2019
season, gave up her own service twice but broke the top seed three
times and made the most of Barty's 19 unforced errors to stun the
partisan crowd by taking the first set.
Barty, though, has made much of her ability to adjust to her
opponents this season and took control of the contest, leveling up
the score with a thumping ace before racing away with the deciding
set.
"It's all good," she beamed to the relieved Rod Laver Arena crowd
after the match.
"It's amazing to be out here. Obviously, a tight turnaround after
Adelaide but I sharpened up at the start of the second set and did
what I needed to do."
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Australia's Ashleigh Barty and Ukraine's Lesia Tsurenko shake hands
after their match REUTERS/Issei Kato
Barty next faces Swede Rebecca Peterson or Slovenia's Polona Hercog,
whose contest was one of the many to fall victim to the torrential
rain that lashed Melbourne Park for much of the day.
Her second round tie is also certain to be on one of the main
showcourts and Barty said that it was a thrill to play in front of
her compatriots, however nervous they were after the first set.
"I felt comfortable knowing that I just needed to change a few
things, to adjust, to try and bring the match back in my favor," she
added.
"I think the crowd was incredible. Certainly once I got a bit of a
roll on, they became more and more influential."
Barty knows that with every victory will come greater expectation
but, reverting to the "we" she often uses to emphasize the
importance of her support team, said she was just going to try to
enjoy the experience.
"We're loving it. We're embracing it. There's no other way to
approach it," she said.
"I think we're just going along for the ride, trying to play some
good tennis."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)
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