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Iga Swiatek will be the hot favourite to win a first Australian Open when it begins on Sunday, but could face a stiff challenge from reigning champion Aryna Sabalenka.

AFP Sport highlights five women to watch at first Grand Slam of the year:

Iga Swiatek

Poland's Iga Swiatek is top of the women's rankings
The world number one is a four-time Grand Slam champion but has never been beyond the semi-finals at Melbourne Park.

The Polish player rocketed back to the top of the rankings after winning her first WTA Finals trophy in November.

She enjoyed a stellar season in 2022, recording 37 straight wins, but faltered last year, with her 75-week run as number one ending in September.

However, Swiatek, 22, lost only one of her final 13 matches of the season and followed up by winning all five of her singles at the United Cup this month.

Aryna Sabalenka

Aryna Sabalenka 'really disrespected by the WTA' after poor organisation |  The Independent
The 2023 Australian Open champion looked on course to finish the year on top of the world rankings until Swiatek pipped her by winning the WTA Tour finals.

The consistent Belarusian, who came from a set down to beat Elena Rybakina in the final 12 months ago, boasted a fine record at the majors last year.

She reached the semi-finals in Paris and at Wimbledon before losing to Coco Gauff in the final of the US Open.

The powerful 25-year-old was the first player since Serena Williams in 2016 to reach at least the semi-finals at all four Slams in a single season.

Sabalenka reached the final at the recent Brisbane International, losing to Rybakina.

Elena Rybakina 

Elena Rybakina won the WTA 500. Her opponent offered virtually no  resistance | Dailysports

The Russian-born Kazakh came close a year ago to adding the Australian Open crown to her 2022 Wimbledon title, losing to Sabalenka in three sets.

The world number three started the year in style, dropping just three games in beating Sabalenka in the Brisbane final, where she lost only 15 games in five matches.

“For sure it gives me confidence,” she said about her Australian Open prospects. “I’m playing well now, so hopefully I continue.”

Naomi Osaka

Home | Naomi Osaka

The Japanese fan favorite knows her way around Melbourne Park, triumphing in 2019 and 2021, but she is something of an unknown quantity this year.

The former world number one has admitted she almost gave up on tennis but is now back in love with the sport.

The 26-year-old stepped away from the game in September 2022, citing mental health concerns. She subsequently gave birth to daughter Shai.

Osaka will be unseeded after dropping to 833 in the world.

Emma Raducanu

Get to Know Emma Raducanu, the British teen making history at Wimbledon
Britain’s Emma Raducanu stunned the tennis world when she won the US Open in 2021 as a qualifier but only on one other occasion has she reached the fourth round of a Grand Slam.

The 21-year-old has plummeted to 299th in the world after an eight-month layoff with ankle and wrist injuries.

Raducanu, who has a high profile despite her relative lack of success, took Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina to three sets in round two in Auckland.

But she is still feeling her way back from injury and will likely regard any sort of run in Melbourne as a bonus.

Naomi Osaka’s new biography, written by journalist Ben Rothenberg, has made some surprising claims about the aftermath of her 2018 US Open final win against Serena Williams.

A brief but memorable history of Serena Williams vs. Naomi Osaka - The  Washington Post

While both players were very close in the rankings heading into the match, Williams, with experience of 30 Grand Slam finals, was the overwhelming favorite against the then-first-time Major finalist Osaka.

Osaka, however, rose to the occasion and registered a dominant win. She needed just 79 minutes to wrap up the 6-2, 6-4 victory at the Arthur Ashe Stadium and become Japan’s first Major singles champion.

Williams, on the other hand, fell one win short of two records: tying Margaret Court’s all-time Grand Slam title record and becoming the first mom to win a Major since Kim Clijsters in 2011.

While Osaka looked calm and composed that night in New York, Williams allegedly let her emotions get the best of her. During the match, she incurred a point penalty after receiving a coaching violation and breaking a racquet.

Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams to meet in Rogers Cup quarters | Tennis  News | Sky Sports

The 23-time Major winner then got a code violation for verbal abuse, which triggered an automatic game penalty. After the match, Williams spoke about trying to remain positive and move forward.

“I don’t know how I’m feeling yet. Haven’t had time to really process everything. But I’m just trying to stay positive and to look at all the bright things and all the good things and just keep going forward with that,” she said during the trophy presentation.

In Osaka’s new biography, titled ‘Naomi Osaka: Her Journey to Finding Her Power and Her Voice’, journalist Rothenberg has stated that Williams remained angry after going back to the locker room and also threw the runner-up trophy in the dustbin.

“Once she was behind closed doors, Serena made her feelings about the relic of her loss clear, dumping the platter into a trash can,” he said in the book. (via Tennis Channel)

He has also stated that when someone attempted to retrieve the trophy and give it to her, Williams refused to take it back, saying:

“I. Don’t. Play. For. Second. Place.”

“Serena Williams never has kept her runner-up trophies” – Agent Jill Smoller

Serena Williams is a 23-time Grand Slam champion.
Serena Williams is a 23-time Grand Slam champion.

Serena Williams’ disdain for runner-up trophies has been well-documented over the years.

Her agent Jill Smoller once stated that coming second has always been unacceptable to the tennis great. She added that since Williams does not like being reminded of all the finals she lost, a lot of her runner-up trophies have ended up in her office.

“Winning is always the most important thing for her. There is not a lot of gray with Serena Williams; she understands winning and losing and second place is not acceptable. I have a lot of runner-up trophies in my office underneath in cabinets; she never has kept her runner-up trophies. She’s always felt like ‘why do I want to be reminded that I wasn’t the best?” Smoller said on an episode of The GOAT: Serena podcast.

Williams has also been vocal about her feelings for coming second. During a tour of her home with Architectural Digest in 2021, she spotted a Grand Slam runner-up plaque in her trophy room and joked:

“Yeah I see a second place trophy but I’m gonna put that one in the trash, it shouldn’t be in there. We don’t keep second place.”

One of the sport’s few stars is back on the court. That doesn’t guarantee the sport has learned from its mistakes

Naomi Osaka is a lot of things. She’s a woman. She’s a mom. She’s great at her job. She’s Black. She’s Asian. And when you’re more than what simple people can comprehend, they usually don’t know how to treat you. Here’s to tennis learning from their mistakes when it comes to Osaka — but we shouldn’t hold our breath.

Naomi Osaka

Earlier this week, Osaka won her first competitive match since the Fall of 2022, 6-3, 7-6 (9), over Tamara Korpatsch at the Brisbane International. Osaka hasn’t been around much. Coming into the week she’d only played one competitive match since the 2022 U.S. Open.

“It’s a big change overnight,” Osaka said about returning to the sport as a mother. “For me, I love it a lot because, in a way, I would say (Shai, her daughter), has helped me grow up so much so quickly.

“Off the court, I’m more aware of people and I appreciate them a lot more — even my opponents and everything,” she added. “On the court, it’s just helping me be strong and staying in the moment more.”

In case you forgot, ever since she came on the scene, tennis has gone out of its way to let Osaka know they don’t want her around.

Naomi Osaka: The Grand Slams pledge to offer Japanese star help as she takes time away from the court | Tennis News | Sky Sports

She’s been heckled, which makes no sense given how great she is at tennis, on top of the fact that tennis is supposed to be a “sophisticated” sport with decorum.

Other greats within the sport have taken shots at her, like when Novak Djokovic did it because Osaka wanted to pay a fine rather than do press conferences after matches. And certain “media members” haven’t had any tact when asking questions.

“You are not crazy about dealing with us, especially in this format, yet you have a lot of outside interests that are served by having a media platform,” Paul Daugherty of the Cincinnati Enquirer asked in 2021. “When you say I’m ‘not crazy about dealing with you guys,’ Osaka responded, “what does that refer to?” Osaka was pointing to how Daugherty had started a question with “You are not crazy” when addressing someone who’d become one of the faces of mental health in sports at the time. This is the same woman whose introduction to one of the biggest stages in the sport was met with boos, as people were mad when she defeated Serena Williams in the 2018 U.S. Open.

Naomi Osaka and her team talk about the former world number one's long-awaited comeback - BBC Sport

“I just want to tell you guys, she played well and this is her first Grand Slam,” Williams tearfully said that day. “Let’s make this the best moment we can.”

It’s no surprise that Osaka stepped away from the game in 2021 for her own mental health, and took her time with her pregnancy and returning to tennis as a mother.

As Osaka transitions back to being a full-time player on the circuit — if that’s what she ultimately decides to do — she will be back playing a sport that is still led by a Black woman, as Coco Gauff is the new “it” girl. The $22.7 million that Gauff made in 2023 means that she was the highest-paid female athlete.

Osaka’s run in Australia ended when she lost in the second round, 3-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4, to Karolina Pliskova. “The week is definitely shorter than I wanted it to be,” she said. “I feel like I’m pretty good where I am right now. Even the last time I played her, I think I played better today.” She went on to say that she viewed the tournament as a “personal win” because she was “doubting if I could play with everyone,” just weeks prior.

“I’ve trained so hard since giving birth, I need to enjoy these moments,” she explained. “I do feel different. I mean, of course I feel sad, but the sadness is me being like, ‘Aww, I wish I could have done better, because I know I’m spending so much time away from her (Shai), so I want it to be worth it somehow.” Motherhood has changed Naomi Osaka. I just hope tennis has changed enough to stop hating on her.