Jul. 27, 2021

Tokyo 2020+1

「12歳以上」どう考える?・コロナワクチン 広がる接種
「12歳以上」どう考える?・コロナワクチン 広がる接種

 

TOKYO 2020 OLYMPICS

 

大逆転 13歳伸び盛り

Summer Olympics / Tennis

'This one sucks': Naomi Osaka out of Tokyo Olympics in shock defeat

Tennis star Naomi Osaka’s dreams of home Olympic gold were crushed in a 6-1, 6-4 defeat to Marketa Vondrousova on Tuesday as her return to action came to an abrupt end.

Osaka, who lit the Olympic cauldron and was one of the faces of the Games, struggled in an error-strewn display that blew the draw wide open after the earlier exits of world No. 1 Ashleigh Barty and third seed Aryna Sabalenka.

 “How disappointed am I? I mean, I’m disappointed in every loss, but I feel like this one sucks more than the others,” said the four-time Grand Slam winner.

Asked what went wrong, she replied: “Everything — if you watch the match then you would probably see. I feel like there’s a lot of things that I counted on that I couldn’t rely on today.”

The third-round defeat follows a turbulent few months for Osaka, who abandoned her French Open campaign in May after refusing to attend news conferences, citing the need to preserve her mental health.

Osaka also skipped Wimbledon, saying she had been battling depression and anxiety, before returning in Tokyo for her first Olympics including her starring role at the opening ceremony.

“I definitely feel like there was a lot of pressure for this. I think it’s maybe because I haven’t played in the Olympics before and for the first year (it) was a bit much,” said Osaka.

After looking assured in the first two rounds after her eight-week hiatus, Osaka made a dreadful start under the center court roof at a rain-hit Ariake Tennis Park and never recovered.

“I’ve taken long breaks before and I’ve managed to do well. I’m not saying that I did bad right now, but I do know that my expectations were a lot higher,” she said.

“I feel like my attitude wasn’t that great because I don’t really know how to cope with that pressure so that’s the best that I could have done in this situation.”

Osaka dropped serve in the opening game and was broken twice more as the 42nd-ranked Vondrousova raced away with the first set.

The second seed broke in the second set but relinquished the early advantage with a double fault that allowed Vondrousova to level at two games apiece.

The 23-year-old grappled with inconsistency, and even when given a sniff of regaining the initiative she had no response to Vondrousova’s array of crafty drop shots.

Osaka saved two match points as she served to stay alive at 4-5 but Vondrousova converted on the third time of asking as the Japanese superstar smacked a backhand wide.

Vondrousova will go on to face Spain’s Paula Badosa or Nadia Podoroska of Argentina in the quarterfinals.

“Of course it’s one of the biggest wins of my career,” said Vondrousova, the 2019 French Open runner-up.

“Naomi is a great player, she has so many Grand Slams, so I knew it would be a tough match. I’m very happy with my play.

“I played amazingly in the first set, and then the second set was really tough. I’m just happy to be through.”

Ukrainian fourth seed Elina Svitolina is the highest-ranked women’s player remaining in Tokyo.

Earlier Stefanos Tsitsipas advanced to the men’s third round as he avenged last month’s Wimbledon loss to Frances Tiafoe.

The Greek third seed downed American Tiafoe 6-3, 6-4 in the opening match of the day as all play on outside courts was delayed an hour by morning drizzle.

Tsitsipas, who is also entered in mixed doubles with Maria Sakkari, will play France’s Ugo Humbert or Miomir Kecmanovic of Serbia for a spot in the quarterfinals.

Having lost to Tiafoe in the opening round at Wimbledon, Tsitsipas ensured there was no repeat as a single break in each set enabled him to wrap up victory in 77 minutes.

 

National

 

Tokyo reports record 2,848 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday

Tokyo saw a sharp rise in its number of coronavirus infections after officials reported 2,848 new cases Tuesday — the city’s highest ever daily count — as it struggles to contain a record-breaking resurgence just days after the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games.

The previous record in the capital was on Jan. 7, when officials announced 2,520. The figure announced Tuesday doubled the 1,387 cases reported the same day one week earlier.

 

 

The growing wave is adding to long-held concerns over the public health risks of hosting the Tokyo Games.

“We ask that residents stay indoors and avoid all unnecessary travel,” Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga told reporters Tuesday evening. “We also ask that everyone watch the Tokyo Games from their own homes.”

The delta variant is spreading rapidly, Suga said, adding that people in their 30s accounted for 70% of new cases nationwide on Tuesday and an increasing number of people in their 40s and 50s are requiring hospitalization after becoming infected.

Other prefectures reported record-breaking figures, with Okinawa seeing 334 cases and Saitama logging 593 on Tuesday.

Media tallies on Tuesday evening said the country was set to report at least 7,000 cases nationwide, the most since mid-May.

In Tokyo, people in their 20s accounted for about a third of the cases on Tuesday, while overall people younger than 60 accounted for 91% of the total.

Calls made to the Tokyo Metropolitan Government's fever hotline reached 3,303 on Sunday, topping 3,000 for the fourth consecutive day and surpassing the number of calls the city saw during the country’s third wave at the turn of the year.

While fatalities remain relatively low, the number of severely ill patients in Tokyo rose to 82 on Tuesday, a marginal but nonetheless concerning increase from the 78 the city saw on Monday.

The country has experienced four waves and three states of emergency. A fourth state of emergency is now active in two places — Tokyo and Okinawa Prefecture — until mid-August, and the country appears to be in the midst of a fifth wave.

With the effectiveness of states of emergency dwindling, the country is losing its strongest weapon against the coronavirus. New cases are emerging at a faster rate and across a growing number of prefectures, and it’s not clear what else the country can do to stifle the contagion.

This outbreak — which began in Tokyo just days after its third state of emergency ended on June 20 — has seen young people represent a larger proportion of cases and more patients with severe symptoms who require hospital treatment.

With the viral surge escalating in the capital’s neighboring prefectures, calls have grown for a state of emergency in Kanagawa, Chiba and Saitama.

Infections among people living together and coworkers sharing the same office space continue to account for the largest portion of traceable new cases.

Experts warned in late June that the capital could be set for another wave — one fueled by deadlier variants and exacerbated by the apathy of a fatigued population made noncompliant by disjointed and unchanging attempts to contain the virus.

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