Sam Stosur crashes out of home Open

The failure of Australian tennis players on home soil continues as women’s sixth seed Stosur becomes first shock exit.

Samantha Stosur
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U.S. Open winner Stosur (R) was one of the favourites going into the Australian Open [GALLO/GETTY]

Coming into the Australian Open as a Grand Slam winner ought to have lifted the pressure from Sam Stosur. Instead, it seemed to double it.

The reigning U.S. Open champion crashed out in the first round, beaten 7-6 (2), 6-3 by Sorana Cirstea in front of her home crowd at Rod Laver Arena on Tuesday.

Her bid to end a 34-year drought for Australian women at the Australian Open was in tatters on just the second day of the tournament.

As she spoke to the media afterward, her eyes appeared red and slightly swollen.

“It’s hard to suppress those emotions when it means so much to you”

Sam Stosur

“I’m probably very close to crying, having a really awful night,” Stosur said.

“It’s hard to suppress those emotions when it means so much to you.”

There were no other major surprises in the first round with Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray joining Rafa Nadal and Roger Federer in the next stage.

World number two Petra Kvitova also joined Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Avarenka in the second round. 

The sixth-seeded Stosur had never got past the fourth round at the Australian Open.

In 10 trips to Melbourne Park, Stosur has lost in the first round three times – the last time in 2005.

The defeat wasn’t entirely surprising. She also lost early at two tuneup tournaments, and after going out in the first round at the Sydney International, she admitted she was struggling to cope with the pressure.

“The whole emotional side of things really took over,” the 27-year-old Stosur said.

“It never felt like I was able to be loose and free with the way I wanted to play.”

Pressure too much

Stosur has been working with a psychologist from the Australian Institute of Sport since last April to try to overcome the stress she sometimes feels on the court. It helped her rediscover her form after falling flat in the 2010 French Open final against Francesca Schiavone.

Against 13-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams in the U.S. Open final last September, Stosur stayed remarkably calm in a commanding 6-2, 6-3 win.

It was Williams who lost her cool in front of a home crowd; Stosur remained composed long enough to become the first Australian women since Evonne Goolagong Cawley at Wimbledon in 1980 to win a Grand Slam singles title.

Against No. 59-ranked Cirstea on Tuesday, however, Stosur could hardly keep the ball in court, spraying 33 unforced errors.

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     Sorana Cirstea celebrates upsetting one of Australia’s home hopes [GALLO/GETTY] 

“I think for sure it affects you physically,” the 27-year-old Stosur said of her nerves.

“I think it is easy to see that you tighten up, your shoulders do get tight, you don’t hit through the ball.

“When anyone’s nervous, I think the first thing that goes is your footwork. You don’t move your feet as well. Once that breaks down, it’s easy for other things to start breaking down.”

Cirstea was all too aware of the baggage Stosur was carrying.

“She had the pressure. I had nothing to lose,” Cirstea said.

“Sam, she’s a great player. She just won the U.S. Open. She had a lot of pressure on her shoulders coming out today. I just tried to play my best.”

No Australian woman had won the title since Chris O’Neil in 1978. Hana Mandlikova won the Australian Open in 1980 and 1987 while competing as a Czech, but didn’t go past the quarterfinals after becoming a naturalised Australian in 1988.

The men’s drought is longer, dating back to Mark Edmondson’s win in 1976 – Pat Cash, Pat Rafter and Lleyton Hewitt could win majors elsewhere, but not at home. Cash was quoted in the local media on the morning of Stosur’s match,
sympathising with her struggles.

“It gets really tough for us here,” he said.

“The problem is so many people want a piece of you during the Australian Open. It’s got to Lleyton Hewitt over the years, it encumbered Pat Rafter who never played anything like as well as he did at the U.S. Open, or even Wimbledon, and it’s not really helping Sam.”

Source: AP