Underappreciated Sam Stosur - the best Australian tennis player of the last decade

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http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/11/s...etly-stays-the-course.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0

The tempestuous Nick Kyrgios, with his whip of a forehand and meticulously razored etchings in his eyebrows and hair, will command some attention next week as a local in the Australian Open. As will another Aussie, Bernard Tomic, a slowly reforming wild child whose arrest in Miami in July barely derailed a season in which he broke into the top 20 for the first time. And as long as he lasts in the tournament, the elder statesman Lleyton Hewitt will be a crowd favorite in what he has said will be his final tournament.

Oh, and then there is the best Australian player of the past decade.

That player, Samantha Stosur, is the only Australian to have been ranked in the top 10 in singles within the last nine years, peaking at No. 4 in 2011. In that year, she defeated Serena Williams in the final of the US Open, handing Williams one of just four losses in her 25 major final appearances.

Stosur, now ranked 27th, had her run of six and a half years as the highest-ranked Australian in either women’s or men’s singles come to an end in September when she was passed by Tomic, but with the current uncertainty atop the women’s tour, she may have the best chance of any Aussie to win a major title this year. At 31, she is still younger than Williams and Flavia Pennetta, the only winners of major titles on the women’s side last year.

At the Brisbane International last week, Stosur said she felt only somewhat eclipsed by the headline-grabbing young stars.

“I’m not too far behind Bernie, so hopefully, I’m still there,” Stosur said, referring to the 23-year-old Tomic. “At the end of the day, there’s still going to be expectation, and no greater expectation than what I’m going to put on myself.”

After Stosur earned her 500th career win in August, the retired Australian doubles champion Todd Woodbridge used the occasion to campaign for a player who he said the public thinks is “not doing very well.”

“I think it’s time we acknowledged we have an incredibly accomplished player that by virtue of her quiet nature doesn’t get the respect she deserves,” he wrote in a column for Tennis Australia.

In an interview last week, Woodbridge said Stosur’s personality was reminiscent of the Australians who dominated the sport for much of the mid-20th century.

“Sam’s never sought the limelight; she’s happy to do her tennis and then that’s it,” he said. “In this world of social media in sport, I think she’s a throwback to the golden age of Australian champions, in terms of being humble. You just went along and did your stuff. And the world has changed in that perspective.”

Woodbridge compared Stosur’s achievements to those of the two-timeUnited States Open champion Patrick Rafter, and said her body of work had more meat to it than sizzle players like Kyrgios, who last week led an Australian pairing to victory in the Hopman Cup exhibition event in Perth.

“It’s not a flash in the pan,” Woodbridge said. “I just don’t think Australians have realized the consistency that she has played with, and that’s what I get frustrated with. You can look at a Nick and go, ‘He’s great to watch,’ and that, but he hasn’t won a tournament yet, and he’s got a lot of ground to make up before he sits anywhere near the status of what Stosur does.”

Rennae Stubbs, a television commentator and former doubles partner of Stosur’s, said one reason for Stosur’s relatively low profile was that her two best major tournaments were the French Open and the United States Open, which draw the least news media coverage in Australia.

“Sam has those great runs at the French, semis, finals, but it takes her winning a Grand Slam at the U.S. Open, beating Serena, to get some kind of notoriety — and I still think that she didn’t get enough after that,” Stubbs said. “Ironically, the two times that really get a lot of press from the Australian tennis side are Wimbledon and Australia. Unfortunately for Sam, those are her two worst events over the past decade.”

In 24 appearances in Melbourne and Wimbledon, Stosur has never reached the quarterfinals; she has made that round or better six times in Paris and New York.

Woodbridge said one great run in Melbourne, or even an admission of the nerves that have handcuffed her at home, could change impressions of Stosur, who often hides her emotions behind sunglasses on court and unrevealing statements to the news media.

“I think Australians would love to hear her come out and say: ‘You know what? Yeah, I’ve struggled, and it really annoys me that I haven’t come to grips with it,’ ” he said. “She could probably be a little more honest in those emotions.”

Stubbs said sexism in Australia had also played a significant role in the absence of appreciation for Stosur’s achievements.

“Sadly, I think it’s part of a very typical misogynistic world where men tend to follow more of the men’s game, whether it be any sport,” Stubbs said. “If there were more women writers, more women editors, more women buying sponsorships, et cetera, you’d have the question to be asked: What about Sam Stosur? She’s been in the top 20 for so many years; why doesn’t she get more publicity? Sadly, Australia is a little bit more sexist than a lot of countries.”

Stosur, reacting to Woodbridge’s column, expressed a similar sentiment in August.

“I’d like to think I get some recognition,” she said, smiling. “But again, I think it’s still probably different; if I was a guy, then it would probably be more. That’s just the way society unfortunately still is at the moment.”

Stubbs said she would understand if Stosur were frustrated by the imbalanced coverage, even if it wouldn’t be in her personality to complain about it publicly.

“All of these guys get all this attention and all this publicity for all the wrong things, and Sam has always done everything right — every single thing,” Stubbs said. “She’s always trained harder than the person beside her. She’s always acted in the best of intentions.”
 
I'm reading a New York Times article in which Sam Stosur is being praised by other tennis champions. We should all be so underappreciated.

"Sam's never sought the limelight" and yet we're wondering why she doesn't get as much publicity as Kyrgios etc. Bland personality, plays with very little flair. Is the general public supposed to latch on to the subtleties of her second serve?

A lack of hysteria around an athlete should not be lamented, the scandal is elevating them to the front page at all. I thought the one unique thing Stosur had going for her was that she didn't need her ego to be stroked, but now we're being told different.
 

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I think most Australians, and certainly keen tennis observers, if asked would happily accept Stosur as the best Australian tennis player of the last decade, it's beyond argument. And that's just her singles performance, without even getting into her doubles successes. Not to mention the best Australian female in singles for at least two decades. Despite the USO win, I think the 2010 french open final was the moment the nation really got behind her. Ironically, that would have been more of a famous win for Australians than beating Serena at her home slam.

And the Stosur archetype in terms of personality isn't that uncommon in women's tennis. Possibly underappreciated locally based on where her greatest successes have occurred, but I imagine she likes being largely free of the limelight and the public would make that assumption of privacy. She is acknowledged fairly sufficiently, and we ALL love her, at least a little. She hasn't ruffled many feathers and doesn't divide the nation. If she was your daughter's favourite player, you wouldn't discourage it.
 
I think most Australians, and certainly keen tennis observers, if asked would happily accept Stosur as the best Australian tennis player of the last decade, it's beyond argument. And that's just her singles performance, without even getting into her doubles successes. Not to mention the best Australian female in singles for at least two decades. Despite the USO win, I think the 2010 french open final was the moment the nation really got behind her. Ironically, that would have been more of a famous win for Australians than beating Serena at her home slam.

If you get FTA to show the final of a slam they never bother with, then chances are you have really made it big as an Australian player. :p
 
If you get FTA to show the final of a slam they never bother with, then chances are you have really made it big as an Australian player. :p
Ikr! That was incredible, the nation was so keen at that time, and you could also argue that Stosur wasn't quite a set-in-stone personality in the public's imagination then either.
 
From the POV of someone who doesn't watch a huge amount of tennis outside the majors, Sam probably loses the attention because she doesn't seem to really challenge outside of the years she's gone to the final and/or won. I know that sounds silly, but I mean that she often struggles to get past the first or second round against opponents she should be losing to once in a blue moon. There's been hype around her at various stages, but she's rarely delivered.

Still our greatest player from the last decade, can't be much question about that.
 
Has barely got a mention on news broadcasts all week. Kyrgios pulling out of the olympics and swearing at a ball boy makes more headlines.

Its absolutely f***ed.


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Has barely got a mention on news broadcasts all week. Kyrgios pulling out of the olympics and swearing at a ball boy makes more headlines.

Its absolutely f***ed.


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I'm sure her "crashing out" will get a mention now. :thumbsu:
 

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of course. And then the 2 week supporters of tennis will say she choked, when clearly, Muguruza was and is the better player.

the same thing said about world cup soccer.

what we need is to embrace newbies or casual followers to a sport, not treat them like outcasts and look down at them
 
Do not agree at all. A league gets a lot of coverage in the printed press during the season, maybe a better comparison would be basketball which is wildly popular amongst the younger generation but does not get much coverage in the Oz press.

on the 5 point likert scale i'm giving it a 1 (strongly disagree).

every world cup you'll see people who either dislike soccer, or are casuals (know EPL teams, some players, HUGE man u/real madrid/psg/barca fans) become more engaged during the WC. however, come every other year they'll post, comment rarely or when their team wins against some other team they dont know about.

however i agree with your statement about basketball. although when teh olympics come around i dont feel there is as many casuals joining in the chorus
 
of course. And then the 2 week supporters of tennis will say she choked, when clearly, Muguruza was and is the better player.

so true lol these supporters only watch tennis during the Australian Open and call themselves tennis experts. But if you ask them about other tournaments, they are clueless.
 
Sorry, I'm once of those casual tennis watchers.
Can one of you more expert tennis people explain 2013 Aussie open capitulation to Chinese girl if not a choke?
 
Sorry, I'm once of those casual tennis watchers.
Can one of you more expert tennis people explain 2013 Aussie open capitulation to Chinese girl if not a choke?

Can you explain her grand slam win at the 2011 US Open? Or didnt you know about that?


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Lol what an article, another excuse to pick on Nick and Bernie?


Sam's ranking has been pretty good over the last few years.

i guess with sam the "issue" is her record at the oz open. other than that, she really isnt that bad. happy to her her as the standard bearer of aus tennis. kyrios and bern could do worse than sit down and have a chat to her about getting everything out of themselves.
 

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