Sam Stosur in shock Australian Open exit

By Sports Freak / Roar Pro

Sam Stosur’s horror run at home has continued, with the US Open champion today knocked out in the first round of the Australian Open.

Stosur was defeated in staight sets by Sorana Cirstea 7-6 (7-2) 6-3 in an error-filled match. The Queenslander never looked confident during the match, and made 33 unforced errors to Cirstea’s 26.

Despite strong crowd support, as you would expect from the local favourite, Stosur couldn’t beat the Romanian who is ranked 59th in the world, more than 50 places below her. This is terrible news for Australian tennis, especially with fellow female Aussie players Dokic, Dellacqua and Rogowska moving into the second round.

Stosur’s early exits from the Brisbane and Sydney International heading into the Australian Open raised doubts about her ability to handle the extra pressure and expectations, following her breakout past 18 months, and these doubts will only intensify.

Her loss is a blow not only to the game here, but to the tournament organisers and broadcast partner Channel Seven, with their hopes now on Bernard Tomic to lead the Aussie charge.

For Stosur, it seems time to stop and rebuild, take stock of her achievements and put these past failures behind her. Get her mind off tennis for a while.

Stosur will need to realise that her standing has changed – she is no longer someone who can fly under the radar, especially at home.

As a US Open champion, and a finallist of the French Open, Stosur will seen as a contender at every tournament she plays in. A threat, a prized scalp on the circuit.

Stosur is known for her toughness, her willingness to fight and as a strong competitior. But it seems her mental will is what deserts her at the moment.

If she is to move to the next step, from being a one-Grand Slam winner to someone who has claimed several – which is no small leap – she will need to become much stronger mentally. She needs to be winning the battle within herself before taking the court and facing other players.

The Crowd Says:

2012-01-17T11:07:00+00:00

Reece Jordan

Roar Pro


I think I worded my message poorly. I suppose instead of saying 'blame', I should have said an attributing factor. It's not the media's 'fault', but it more of explanation as to how her mental fragility has flared up and caused her to crash. It's not something that the media should be condemned or criticised for at all, and definitely doesn't take the blame off of Stosur, I was merely offering my opinion on why I partially foresaw her struggling in Australia.

2012-01-17T09:12:17+00:00

apaway

Roar Guru


I'm a huge fan of Sam Stosur but her mental fragility is frightening. It's not the media's fault.

2012-01-17T08:35:11+00:00

Matt F

Roar Guru


It's a bit rich to be blaming the media, even if only partly, isn't it? She's the world number 6 who just won the last Grand Slam tournament that was played. What are they expected to do, bury all stories about her in the bottom corner and 12 pages into the sports section? If the can't consider her a genuine contender based on that then they never will. Relative to their rankings, Tomic and even Hewitt during the last 3 or so years, have had alot more unfair pressure put on them. Certainly the media attention was nowhere near what Murray gets at Wimbledon and he still manages to get deep into the tournament, despite having not yet won one. It's a very dissapointing result for Sam but she'll have more opportunities to win majors. She's not done with yet.

2012-01-17T06:03:41+00:00

Reece Jordan

Roar Pro


Really tragic for Australian tennis and for Sam, but sadly I foresaw this happening although I didn't expect her to go this early. Part of the blame has to go to the Australian media (and yes, that's a very large, faceless entity) who have placed so much pressure on Stosur in the lead-up. But nevertheless, all we can do is hope that Sam bounces back at the French Open, away from the Aussie spotlight and her failure here is just a small bump on the way to a big year for her and Australian tennis.

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