Naomi Osaka’s return to the U.S. Open earns her first top-10 win in 4 years

Naomi Osaka is advancing to the second round of the U.S. Open after defeating the sport’s No. 10 seed, Jelena Ostapenko.

Osaka, currently ranked No. 88 in singles, shed tears after beating the Latvian native 6-3, 6-2. This is her first win against a top 10 opponent in four years.

“I would say I made a promise to myself to be as confident as I can in the fact that I am who I am,” she said after the match. “I feel like for me, throughout the year, I’ve had really hard matches and it kind of dipped my confidence a little, and I wouldn’t say that I played bad tennis. I just would say that I played really good players and I also learned a lot.”

Osaka has won two U.S. Open titles — in 2018 and 2020 — and two Australian Open titles, in 2019 and 2021.

The Japanese native took hiatuses from the sport for her mental health in 2021, and again after giving birth to her 1-year-old daughter, Shai.

“I do think coming to this specific tournament helps me out,” she said. “But also, whenever I step foot here, I don’t really think about the two tournaments I won, I just think about how I felt when I was a kid.”

She has not gone past the second round at a major tournament since her comeback, but will have the opportunity to do so in her next matchup against Karolina Muchova, from the Czech Republic, ranked No. 52.

 

Torrential rains trigger mass evacuations as rivers surge in Central Europe

Torrential rains in Central Europe have forced massive evacuations in the hardest hit areas in the Czech Republic, where floods reached extreme levels on Sunday.

Creative ways communities are reducing food waste

While lots of powerful changes to reduce food waste can start at home, sometimes the scale of the problem benefits from a community-wide approach.

Not sure what to make for dinner? Here are recipes to help you eat sustainably

Finding meals that are good for you, your wallet and the environment can be difficult. We've pulled together a few recipes to make sustainable choices even easier.

How do you help young Afghan refugees heal? A new program in Maine offers a way

Research shows that a toxic mix of past traumas and the stresses of resettlement puts refugee kids at significantly higher risk of long term mental health challenges. A new effort aims to mitigate those risks by supporting parents and children in refugee families.

Exhausted? Irritable? It could be undiagnosed iron deficiency

Around a third of women of reproductive age could have low iron. But doctors don’t routinely screen for the condition, though it can lead to anemia. Symptoms include exhaustion, headaches and more.

Eating less beef is a climate solution. Here’s why that’s hard for some American men

Climate researchers have long grappled with how to get Americans to eat less beef, a food with a huge global warming impact. Now some are thinking about it through the lens of gender.

More Front Page Coverage