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Kostyuk took a long break at the changeover that lasted more than eight minutes to get her ankle taped. A forehand inside-in winner at break point down helped her hold for 1-1 in the second set. In the fourth game, Kostyuk was even more obstinate, erasing six break points against her in a seven deuce game, holding on gamely for 2-2. At long last, Kostyuk found the formula to break Osaka in the seventh game of the second set. She altered her return of serve positioning and started attacking Osaka’s second serve.
Kostyuk moved into a 5-3 lead and nearly broke a disconcerted Osaka again in the ninth game before the No. 4 seed saved a set point and held on. Now Kostyuk was too aware of the score. She double faulted to fall behind 0-40 in the tenth game and was broken at 15 for 5-5. Both players held to set up a tie-break.
When Osaka went ahead 2-0 in that sequence, she seemed likely to get the job done in straight sets. But the audacious Ukrainian took the next four points and eventually succeeded seven points to four in that tie-break to make it one set all. Osaka was disillusioned, throwing her racket down on the court after losing that set, distressed by her inability to complete her task.
Osaka was in a serious bind. She trailed 1-2 in the third set and drifted to 0-40 in the fourth game. If she had been broken there, Osaka might well have lost this match. But she served an ace down the T for 15-40, laced a forehand winner up the line, and was fortunate when Kostyuk tamely netted a forehand second serve return. Kostyuk promptly garnered a fourth break point opportunity for 3-1, but Osaka took control and connected impeccably for a crackling forehand crosscourt winner. After four deuces, Osaka held on critically for 2-2.
Now Kostyuk was shaken. She double faulted twice to trail 0-40 in the fifth game and was broken at 30. Thereafter, Osaka relaxed and performed with controlled aggression the rest of the way. In the last three games, she conceded only one point. She took 19 of the last 22 points to close out the 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-2 account.
Afterwards, the quietly expressive Osaka shared her thoughts with ESPN. She said, “For me, I just feel like I had so many points that I didn’t capitalize on. I think when I went up I became a bit passive and then she came in because she has no fear. I was just thinking too much in the past, but in the third set I just kept my head in the present.”
Osaka conceded that she was exhausted after completing a draining victory on a scorching afternoon. “I am very tired right now,” she said. “I just want to go into an ice bath. I am not sure if this is classified as an emergency but I feel I am going to pass out.”
Yet before she left Arthur Ashe Stadium, Osaka praised her adversary. She said, “”For me it was kind of unavoidable [that it went three sets]. She was playing too good. While I was cursing at myself and you wouldn’t want to know what I was saying. I feel like I have to be more adept during the points instead of sitting down and thinking about it during the games. I should be thinking more while I am out there playing.”
Now it is incumbent on Osaka to keep raising her game as she heads into the heart of the tournament. The view here is that she will do just that. The good news is that her hamstring does not seem to be troubling her much at all. If she can stay healthy and find her best tennis down the stretch, if she can summon the drive and determination when she needs it most, Naomi Osaka is fully capable of capturing her second US Open crown.