Many people’s introduction to @naomiosakatennis came in September at the U.S. Open trophy presentation, when the surprise #champion—who stunned @serenawilliams—covered her eyes with her visor as boos rained from the crowd. The moment should have been celebratory—a rising star assuming her place among champions after defeating the greatest of them all. Instead, it was painful. “I didn’t want people to see me crying,” Osaka tells @time, “because that’s pathetic.” At first, Osaka thought the boos were for her. She knew the crowd, and millions more watching on TV, desperately wanted Williams to win a record-tying 24th Grand Slam title after she nearly died after giving birth. Osaka apologized for doing her job and beating her opponent. And so it was that the woman who could be the heir to the Williams sisters met the world through a frowning face and lowered brim. Three months later, she doesn’t fault Williams for fighting with the umpire and upstaging her victory. “Serena is Serena,” Osaka says in her first extended interview since the match. “I didn’t experience her life. I can’t tell her what she’s supposed to do, because there are things that she’s gone through. I have nothing against her or anything. I actually still really love her.” Osaka insists she’s come to terms with it all. She appreciates that Williams did eventually implore the crowd to stop jeering and applaud Osaka with a proper, if belated, ovation. In fact, Osaka insists she wouldn’t change anything about what happened. “In a perfect dream, things would be set exactly the way you would want them,” she says. “But I think it’s more interesting that in real life, things aren’t exactly the way you planned. And there are certain situations that you don’t expect, but they come to you, and I think those situations set up things for further ahead.” Read the full TIME International cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @caitoppermann for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月12日 08時01分


Many people’s introduction to @naomiosakatennis came in September at the U.S. Open trophy presentation, when the surprise #champion—who stunned @セリーナ・ウィリアムズ—covered her eyes with her visor as boos rained from the crowd. The moment should have been celebratory—a rising star assuming her place among champions after defeating the greatest of them all. Instead, it was painful. “I didn’t want people to see me crying,” Osaka tells @TIME Magazine, “because that’s pathetic.” At first, Osaka thought the boos were for her. She knew the crowd, and millions more watching on TV, desperately wanted Williams to win a record-tying 24th Grand Slam title after she nearly died after giving birth. Osaka apologized for doing her job and beating her opponent. And so it was that the woman who could be the heir to the Williams sisters met the world through a frowning face and lowered brim. Three months later, she doesn’t fault Williams for fighting with the umpire and upstaging her victory. “Serena is Serena,” Osaka says in her first extended interview since the match. “I didn’t experience her life. I can’t tell her what she’s supposed to do, because there are things that she’s gone through. I have nothing against her or anything. I actually still really love her.” Osaka insists she’s come to terms with it all. She appreciates that Williams did eventually implore the crowd to stop jeering and applaud Osaka with a proper, if belated, ovation. In fact, Osaka insists she wouldn’t change anything about what happened. “In a perfect dream, things would be set exactly the way you would want them,” she says. “But I think it’s more interesting that in real life, things aren’t exactly the way you planned. And there are certain situations that you don’t expect, but they come to you, and I think those situations set up things for further ahead.” Read the full TIME International cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @caitoppermann for TIME


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