Tearful Kenin crumbles under pressure of title defence
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[February 11, 2021]
By Nick Mulvenney
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - A tearful Sofia
Kenin admitted the pressure of defending a Grand Slam title for the
first time had proved too great after she tumbled out of the
Australian Open in the second round on Thursday.
The 22-year-old American looked a shadow of the player that won her
first major title at Melbourne Park and reached the French Open
final last season as she succumbed 6-3 6-2 to Estonian veteran Kaia
Kanepi on Margaret Court Arena.
Ashen-faced, with her eyes already blotchy before she sat down for
her post-match media conference, Kenin struggled to hold back the
tears as she explained what had happened out on court.
"My head wasn't there," she said. "Obviously I'm not going to take
any credit away from her. She played really well at those good
points.
"I had chances. I just couldn't take it. I obviously know why
because the nerves big-time got to me."
The tears returned again when she was asked about the pressure of
defending the title, adding that she knew retaining the trophy would
be a tall order given her mental state.
"I'm not there 100% physically, mentally, my game. Everything just
feels real off obviously. It's not good," she added.
"It's weird. I've been practicing for two weeks. Luckily I've been
able to practice. I felt fine in practice. Just couldn't do that in
the game."
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Sofia Kenin of the U.S.
in action during her second round match against Estonia's Kaia
Kanepi REUTERS/Loren Elliott
Russian-born Kenin said she had not decided where she would play
next but admitted she had a lot of thinking to do about how to
arrest the slump in her form.
"I know I couldn't really handle the pressure," she said.
"I'm not obviously used to this, so right now I just got to figure
out how to play at that level that I played at. Because like today
and those matches, it just hasn't been there."
The exit of the fourth seed, even at the hands of a player who last
week was ranked 94th in the world, was not the surprise it might
have been given that Kenin had been talking about struggling with
her nerves since finishing quarantine.
"The Australia trip, that was something that I had my eye on," she
said.
"I knew I was going to have pressure. I knew I was going to have
emotions, nerves, everything all together. Yeah, for sure Australia,
the Aussie swing, definitely got me."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Richard Pullin)
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