Osaka stays on track in title defence and potential Barty clash
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[January 19, 2022] By
Sudipto Ganguly
MELBOURNE (Reuters) -Defending champion Naomi Osaka was pleased that
she found a way out of a second-set blip to beat American Madison
Brengle 6-0 6-4 and reach the Australian Open third round, staying
on course for a potential fourth-round clash with top-ranked Ash
Barty.
The Japanese 24-year-old, who also won the Melbourne Park title in
2019, will next meet 60th-ranked American Amanda Anisimova with a
mouthwatering clash against Australian Barty potentially waiting in
the round of 16.
Barty was equally ruthless in her 6-1 6-1 second-round win over
qualifier Lucia Bronzetti earlier on the Rod Laver Arena and will
next take on Italian Camila Giorgi.
Brengle won just nine points in the first set as an aggressive Osaka
served superbly, facing no breakpoints, and returned strong to
breeze through the set in just 20 minutes. Osaka hit 13 winners to
zero managed by Brengle in the set.
Her dominant performance drew praise from Andy Murray, with the
former world number one quipping on Twitter: "Anyone hit the ball
cleaner from the baseline than @naomiosaka?"
"It's a little bit shocking, because when you're playing, you never
really think the TV is broadcasting it and other people are
watching," said Osaka.
"So, yeah, definitely really surreal. It was really cool just to
have someone like him talking about my game."
Osaka said she was watching quite a few matches on television
herself, including the ones of Australian Nick Kyrgios and Spanish
teenager Carlos Alcaraz.
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Madison Brengle of the U.S. in action during her second round match
against Japan's Naomi Osaka REUTERS/Loren Elliott
The 54th-ranked Brengle, 31, was also mostly a
spectator as she helplessly watched Osaka dominate from the
baseline.
The American had a big smile and raised both her arms in mock
celebration as the crowd cheered her first service game win at the
start of the second set with Osaka's game suffering a sudden dip.
The unforced errors -- just nine in the opening set -- kept climbing
as Osaka shrieked in frustration trying to get her game back on
track. Brengle soon broke Osaka's seemingly impregnable serve to go
up 4-3.
But the service break seemed to wake Osaka up as the two-time U.S.
Open winner regained control and won a flurry of points to seal the
victory after 65 minutes with a second break of serve in the set.
"These are the type of matches that I need to play in Grand Slams,
to get broken and to figure out a way to fight back in really
crucial times," said Osaka, adding that she was "really
disappointed" when she suffered the break of serve.
"I kind of rushed a lot in that specific service game, and you could
kind of tell I was a bit shaky. I made a double fault where I really
shouldn't have.
"But I tried to shake that off in the return game right after, and I
think I did pretty well there."
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Christian Radnedge)
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