Tennis-Barty heartbroken by loss but happy to be back in the game

Ash Barty confessed to being heartbroken at coming up short in the Australian Open quarter-finals on Wednesday but did not want the shock defeat to distract from her successful return to tennis after a year on the sidelines. The world number one returned to the tour for the Melbourne Park warm-up tournaments after staying at home to try to sit out the COVID-19 pandemic, running up an eight-match winning streak before Wednesday's 1-6 6-3 6-2 loss to Karolina Muchova.

Reuters | Updated: 17-02-2021 10:50 IST | Created: 17-02-2021 10:50 IST
Tennis-Barty heartbroken by loss but happy to be back in the game

Ash Barty confessed to being heartbroken at coming up short in the Australian Open quarter-finals on Wednesday but did not want the shock defeat to distract from her successful return to tennis after a year on the sidelines.

The world number one returned to the tour for the Melbourne Park warm-up tournaments after staying at home to try to sit out the COVID-19 pandemic, running up an eight-match winning streak before Wednesday's 1-6 6-3 6-2 loss to Karolina Muchova. "It's heartbreaking, of course," said Barty, who was hoping to become the first homegrown Australian Open champion since Chris O'Neil in 1978.

"But will it deter me? Will it ruin the fact we've had a really successful start to our season? Absolutely not. The sun will come up tomorrow. "We go about our work again. You're either winning or your learning. We won't let ... this particular hour of tennis deter us from what we're trying to do."

In her news conference, Barty channelled her time as a cricketer to repeatedly bat back suggestions that Muchova had gamed the system by taking a medical timeout after losing the opening set. She instead focused on her inability to take back the momentum once the revitalised Czech started playing her best tennis in the second and third sets.

"I felt like I lost control of the ball a little bit," Barty said. "I felt like I lost my way with overplaying, overpressing, not letting myself work into the points and really construct points as well as I'd like to."

Barty said she had entered some upcoming tournaments in the Middle East and would make a final call on where to play after assessing the health risks. "I think the health of my team and myself will always be the priority ... we'll make the right decisions for the right reasons," the former French Open champion added.

"Being back on the tour has been fantastic. I've loved every second, even though at times it is frustrating. That's the name of the game. That's the sport that we play." (Editing by Peter Rutherford )

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


TRENDING

OPINION / BLOG / INTERVIEW

Why unequal access to coronavirus vaccines is a threat to us all

... ...

India’s love affair with fossil fuels: the path to sustainable development?

... ...

Videos

Latest News

UNMAS Iraq welcomes USD4m contribution from Germany for clearance operations

The United Nations Mine Action Service UNMAS in Iraq welcomes an additional contribution of USD four million from the Federal Republic of Germany for the provision of clearance operations in support of stabilization and reconstruction effor...

What you need to know about the coronavirus right now

Heres what you need to know about the coronavirus right now UK calls for conflict zone ceasefires to roll out vaccinesBritain will on Wednesday call for a United Nations resolution to help negotiate ceasefires so that people in conflict zon...

WHO hands over medical supplies and PPE to support COVID-19 response in Kurdistan

The World Health Organization WHO today handed over 13 tons of medical supplies and equipment to the Ministry of Health in the Kurdistan region of Iraq. This donation will scale up intensive care capacity to respond to efforts aimed at cont...

Japan begins COVID-19 vaccination in 'first major step' to halt pandemic

Japan launched its COVID-19 inoculation drive on Wednesday, administering the Pfizer-BionTech vaccine to Tokyo hospital workers, as Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga attempts to beat the odds and host the Olympics this summer. Workers at Tokyo ...

Give Feedback