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© Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.Grand Slam leaders pledge to address Naomi Osaka's concerns
By HOWARD FENDRICH PARIS©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
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Asiaman7
It is so very difficult to have sympathy for an excessively wealthy adult tennis player who cuts off media access by claiming that questions about her clay-court losses cause her to doubt her clay-court ability and thus become depressed, subsequently harming her mental health, yet she then offers access to media (WOWOW) who pay her for the opportunity to ask questions.
memoryfix
She should never have gotten mixed up with that BLM crowd - considering she hates the stress, why did she do that? Trying to be another Colin Kaepernick? Doesn’t suit her. Go that way, she could be out of tennis.
Peter Neil
Imagine the unique pressures of a single mother needing to work at a low wage job, barely able to afford childcare, rent, utilities, car expenses, insurance with almost nothing left for food?
Or how about the pressures of the physically handicapped, unable to work, barely alive from some form of government assistance program?
Or how about the pressures faced by 2 billion poor people in the world who have to live on less than $2 per day?
Or how about the unique pressures of 230 million people sick from parasites from being without safe, drinkable water?
Or how about pressures and stress of 357 million children living in war zones in the world?
Maybe Osaka and the tennis kings and queens are not in as much unique pressure as they like to think they are?
B. Jay
Ganbare Naomi chan
snowymountainhell
Good for Naomi Osaka, then. Work on your recovery, first.
“Hail, Khaleesi, ‘breaker of chains’!” - They will ‘bend the knee’ and the all the press BS will end.
Now,... “back to ‘Sports’ ”.half-hearted jumper
Very interesting to read comments that are so very dismissive of mental health, merely because someone's a professional athlete.
Bob Fosse
Backpedalling self-servers.
Most of the top seeded, male and female, have recently expressed concern about too many tournaments and undue pressure on players. Osaka did something about it and deserves applause not criticism.
snowymountainhell
So far today, ‘no one’ has ‘dismissed mental health issues’ @half-heartedjumper 8:39am. In fact, it looks like everyone here acknowledges it: by encouraging Naomi Osaka, by giving other examples, by questioning possible hypocrisy of some actions, and by also citing and contrasting other, ‘more immediate and life threatening issues’ to people than just the portrayed mental stresses of competitive sports.
snowymountainhell
Agreed @BobFosse 8:57am:
Osaka did something about it and deserves applause not criticism.
Blacklabel
victimhood status: confirmed.
The Avenger
Physical health and injury are well understood and respected. If Naomi had been limping there would likely have been no problem -- even with her decision to skip the press interview. But because no one could see her mental injury she was not/is not believed ... much less excused. Time for re-booting the way athletes are treated by the professional associations/leagues. Our gladiators are human beings.
Pukey2
Exactly. If she does have mental health issues, then she should take a break, and if the problems don't go away, she seriously has to think whether top-level tennis is a career path she wants to continue with. People have sympathy with others suffering from depression, but have little time for people who do nothing about it, especially when a lot of money is still flowing in. Personally I'm more concerned for people who are suffering from mental health issues related to the pandemic and all the job losses. Nobody is forcing her to play tennis.
Golden
Tennis players should not be required to attend news conferences.
Bob Fosse
to be you, highlighted and underlined.
Blacklabel
Was there any other result allowed other than for her to become victimized in all of this?
not like gender or race politics will simply allow her to have to fall under the same rules and expectations as everyone else.
or to be held accountable for her own actions and decisions. That can’t happen in this “woke” environment.
Strangerland
Yes, she needs to be held accountable for denying the entitled people the right, nay, the obligation, to perform for them regardless of her mental health.
The idea that she would consider her anything more than a possession, who is owned by and belongs to the fans regardless of the cost to her mental health, is frankly appalling, and anyone who thinks she has a right to take care of herself should be cursed with the mental health issues she may or may not have but it doesn't matter as she's a possession.
RowanM
...She skipped an interview, paid the fine, and then quit the entire tournament when people didn't like it. This article is literally the response to her "taking a break" and "doing something about it".
You still don't seem satisfied, though, so forgive me if your comment seems a little disingenuous.
Blacklabel
nope, she could have simply not joined at all.
Not joining and then expecting and demanding special treatment. then it turning into a racial and gender issue when she didnt get her way.
Simply dont play if your "mental health" wont allow it.
Strangerland
That's right. Someone with mental health issues is in a clear enough headspace to know what the entitled people demand they should have known before they knew.
Because that makes sense.
Starbucks
RowanM
Well spotted.
RowanM
@blacklabel She did not "demand special treatment". There are rules and clear penalties for breaking them. Don't do the interview? Pay a fine!
Naomi decided that she was ok with that rule and that the fines were acceptable to avoid the interviews.
It was the GRAND SLAMS that were trying to change the rules when she didn't care about the fine (which is why fines are horrible-- they're only a punishment for the poor) and it was them saying "well actually we may disqualify and suspend you, too" that made her quit the tournament.
CKAI
The take of fear...
Why the fear? Don't be afraid. It makes your words weak. And then it makes you sound confused. Salty, but not like a Caesar more like a pretzel. Soon as you get a chance it's like hey- everybody let's do the twist!!
Always twisting whatever scares you into a chance to bring up race again. Again and again.
No surprises ever. Always the race thing. Like you can't get off the dance floor and just leave the club even after the musics stopped and there's no more whisky in the cup. No more ice. You go back for more pretzels. Salty. Now you're twisted around gender and turn that into BLM and twist it back to LGBT, all I hear is pain. I cant say whining customers moderators. But you now if it quacks and waddles...
Salty pretzels.
sunfunbun
She's a human being. She has black blood. She has Japanese blood. Yet, from what she has done and said in the past, I find little evidence of reason to support why does things she does and say things she says.
They do not come from critical thought. Things she does have made little sense, and I believe she needs to have more reasoning in her actions. It seems like a middle school child trying to do the cool or righteous thing, without true consideration of commitment.
I have no idea if her depression is real or not. No one does. She can say it is so, but it could be she has avoidance problems and is just immature. She seems rather juvenile.
She has little credible behavior, so when something happens with her, it's just, 'here we go again'. Not even the worst of tempestuous tennis players cause as much silly news as she does.
I'm a staunch supporter of BLM. I believe Lewis Hamilton and words he says. I don't believe Naomi Osaka's. She seems disingenuous and rather ignorant, which causes questions on her behavior, whatever it may be.
If she believes she has her mental health issues, she shouldn't have gone to the French open to expose it. She should have communication with her management or someone who can advise her to get help and not go to the tournament at all, and take a break from tennis, period.
A mature person would have the foresight to do this, but she chooses being the world center of attention when she says she hate that part of it. I'd say it's hypocritical, but really, it's just dumb. Get a little smarter, Naomi, you are in a world of huge money and in the eye of the world.
The way she does things makes her look like she's a wannabe martyr, and if it was my child, I'd hope she could talk to me and I'd advise her to take care of things away from the public eye. And knowing she is painfully shy, to not bite off more than she can handle. One should be pragmatic if one is to be a political voice or otherwise, knowing or should know fame causes attention and scrutiny.
CKAI
After that you shoulda cashed out.
snowymountainhell
How about “She’s a human being.”
.... and leave it, at that?
stickman1760
Sunfunbun agree with most of that. Why seek the spotlight then desperately try to avoid it? She does seem to be rather immature which is not altogether unusual for someone her age. I really wonder who is advising her because it seems to me they are not doing a very good job. This could be a classic case of too much success too soon.
Blacklabel
No different than it I get a fine for illegally parking my car in the middle of the street.
the police aren’t going to let me just decide to do that everyday because I can afford the fine and am ok to pay it.
fines exist to discourage undesirable behavior- leading to it not happening next time. Not to allow privileged people to do whatever they want.
Strangerland
Ummmm
https://www.cnbc.com/2015/04/15/wealthier-drivers-get-more-tickets-but-dont-pay.html
https://dailytargum.com/article/2020/02/jeff-bezos-parking-ticket-fines-displays-wealth-inequality
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/when-was-parking-illegally-option-be-enjoyed-rich-people-9909030.html
Eight second google. You aren't big on the ol' fact-check, are you.
Hello Kitty 321
@Stickman1760
Perhaps she just enjoys playing tennis but hates speaking in public.
Pukey2
RowanM:
Yes, duh, I know she's taking a 'break', but what next? Is she going to come back and just repeat the cycle? She knew the consequences of skipping a news conference, and yet she went ahead. Why didn't she pull out of the tournament in the first place? It seems to me you enjoy listening to millionaires' problems. There are plenty of other players who would take her place and give interviews. If Osaka is too immature or introverted or nervous, it's not other people's fault. She has other options with all that money she's earned. And she should get professional help. Whining in public is not the solution.
lostrune2
Martina Navratilova:
"I am so sad about Naomi Osaka. I truly hope she will be ok. As athletes we are taught to take care of our body, and perhaps the mental & emotional aspect gets short shrift. This is about more than doing or not doing a press conference. Good luck Naomi -- we are all pulling for you!"
Billie Jean King:
"It’s incredibly brave that Naomi Osaka has revealed her truth about her struggle with depression. Right now, the important thing is that we give her the space and time she needs. We wish her well."
Chris Evert:
"These days, stars have social media so 'nothing is eyeball to eyeball'. They [the stars, the media and the tournaments] need to get together in a room and hash it out in an understanding and empathetic way."
"Take care of yourself - so much has happened to this young woman in a few short years. She is the highest paid athlete in the world... just take time away. Figure it out."
"She needs to communicate with the Grand Slams, come up with a healthy solution that's going to make everyone happy."
It seems now the Grand Slam tournament organizers have turned around and taking Evert's advice with the players about figuring out how to take into consideration the mental health of players.
She was willing to pay the fines, as per the rules. The tournament organizers later tried to change the rules by threatening to keep her out of future Grand Slams.
But not many has her talent and skills, which organizers covet for the prestige of their tournaments. Kinda like imagine if one of the Top Four isn't in the Grand Slams, the Grand Slam organizers would want him in it.
She definitely should. And if a medical doctor diagnoses her as having a legitimate phobia medical condition - what are tournament organizers going to do about it? They can't force someone with a medical condition that goes against doctors' orders.
Strangerland
If I was her, I wouldn't. She's rich. She beat arguably one of the best tennis players of all time. It's messing with her head. Gotta know when to walk away, know when to run.
She leaves now, she's a respected winner, and she can hold her head high, AND keep her mental sanity. That's more important than any money, and definitely more important than any entitled whiners on the internet who will never achieve anything in the same realm of reality of success as this young woman has.
Walk away Naomi. Enjoy life. Screw these people, they're nothing.
Strangerland
But there will always be a question mark. Would she have won? And if not, then what would her rank have been, because there's a question mark over everyone else's head too. Kind of like this upcoming Olympics - it's just not the same if one of the elite players isn't participating.
mmwkdw
These interviews are really terrible to watch... what do you expect the Victor to say, and likewise the Vanquished ?
Danielsan
It's time tennis players formed their own union to protect the interests and well being of the athletes.
Playing tennis at a world class level is difficult enough without being subjected to prying , idiotic questions time and again by second rate hacks.
It is supposed to be about tennis, not about feeding the media circus.
Strangerland
What gave you the silly idea that these are mutually exclusive?
half-hearted jumper
Well, that's not true. The first two comments pretty much fall into that category. Suggesting there's hypocrisy is indeed to be dismissive of her "claims".
Both things can be true.
People can be stressed by "more immediate and life threatening issues", and someone else can be "stressed by the rigors of playing competitive sport." It's not an either/or situation. For someone to point to that, is indeed being dismissive of Naomi Osaka.
For the most part, I think we're on the same side in this.
I agree with you completely (and other comments you've made). I just think maybe you're being a lil' too generous in seeing the good intent in some of the other comments. ;)