After the high of winning her first Wimbledon title, which
fulfilled a childhood dream, the world number one crashed out of
the Tokyo Olympic singles in exhaustion last month.
But the no-nonsense Australian is not one for wallowing.
After claiming a mixed doubles bronze for her country, her
return to American hardcourts has the competitive fires roaring
once again.
"Post-Wimbledon I was completely depleted," the 25-year-old said
after winning the Western & Southern Open on Sunday.
"It was my biggest goal, my biggest dream was to win that one
tournament, and it was almost after that I was just a bit numb
and I didn't really know what to feel," she said.
"I think I still have a bit of that now, but being able to again
refresh and refocus and think we're moving to the hardcourt
season, it's a fresh kind of start."
While hardly a wide-eyed tourist in New York, Barty will cast a
fresh eye over Flushing Meadows, having taken an 11-month break
from the tour last year as the COVID-19 pandemic swept across
the globe.
The hiatus has done wonders for her game, with Sunday's win in
Cincinnati giving her a tour-leading fifth WTA title for the
season.
BOOKMAKERS SPLIT
Bookmakers are split over whether she or champion Naomi Osaka
deserve to be favourite for the U.S. Open, but Barty's mindset
and flawless preparations may stand her in better stead.
Osaka's stardom has proved a major burden for the four-times
Grand Slam champion, who pulled out of her second round match at
the French Open, skipped Wimbledon and bowed out in the third
round at her home Tokyo Olympics with an admission that she did
not know how to cope with the pressure.
Barty, on the other hand, seems at peace with the huge
expectations upon her since reaching world number one and
claiming the French Open in 2019.
"It's a bonus obviously that I was able to win Wimbledon, it's a
bonus now that I get to continue to do what I love," she said on
Sunday.
"And we just keep chipping away .... If that means more titles,
that's great. If it doesn't, it doesn't. That doesn't matter for
me."
She will bid to become only the third Australian woman to win
the U.S. Open women's singles title after Sam Stosur (2011) and
Margaret Court (1962, 1965, 1969, 1970, 1973).
Winning would mean a Grand Slam trophy on all surfaces, a feat
that would seem much further away for Osaka, who is yet to grab
a title of any standing on clay or grass.
The New York crowds have yet to see Barty in the quarter-finals
but can expect her to eclipse her previous fourth round best in
2018-19.
Untroubled by injury and bringing a new aggression to her game,
the Australian's humbling of a parade of Grand Slam champions in
Cincinnati suggests the Barty party should be in full swing deep
into the second week at Flushing Meadows.
(This story refiles to remove "Preview" tag from headline)
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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