Miami Herald (Sunday)

Barty, 2 others ready for U.S. Open after missing last year

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Ash Barty was on the couch, not the court. Bianca Andreescu wasn’t at last year’s U.S. Open, either, and Aryna Sabalenka wasn’t in it for long.

All three could be among the top contenders for the women’s singles title, trying to take the title from defending champion Naomi Osaka when play begins Monday at the year’s final Grand Slam tournament.

Andreescu is the only one of the three who has enjoyed significan­t success at Flushing Meadows, beating Serena Williams for the 2019 championsh­ip in her U.S. Open debut at age 19. (Williams, who owns 23 major titles, is absent this time as she recovers from a torn right hamstring.)

But it seems only a matter of time for Barty and Sabalenka, the top two seeds ahead of No. 3 Osaka.

The top-ranked Barty is rolling into her return to New York, winning her second major title at Wimbledon and adding a hardcourt title at Cincinnati in her last event.

“It feels like a long time since I’ve been back at

New York,” the Australian said. “This week is going to be exciting. It’s got fans. That’s going to bring a lot of energy to this tournament. This is a tournament that thrives with the energy. I can’t wait to get started.”

She opted not to play the U.S. Open because she did not leave Australia during the coronaviru­s pandemic last year and said she didn’t even watch the tournament because of the time difference.

Barty mostly relaxed at home before resuming her training in October.

Now she is deep into a months-long road trip, having not returned to Australia since coming to the U.S. for the Miami hard-court event in March, where she beat Sabalenka and Andreescu for one of her five titles this season.

“I think that she’s had an amazing year. It’s really cool to see someone play so consistent­ly,” Osaka said.

“I would say she seems really determined and really focused. I know that she hasn’t gone home since Australia, so that’s a lot of traveling for her,” said Osaka, who was born in Japan but moved to New York with her family when she was 3 and is now based in California. “I don’t think I’m the type of person that could do that. It’s really incredible that she’s, like, being so — I don’t know, it’s so good for the sport, I would say.”

Like Barty, Sabalenka has never been past the fourth round in New York. She was knocked out in the second round last year, as the 23-year-old from Belarus battled confidence problems in the biggest tournament­s.

But talks with her sports psychologi­st have helped. She had her best result in a major tournament by reaching the semifinals at Wimbledon before being edged by Karolina Pliskova.

While Sabalenka says she has worked with the psychologi­st for five years, she explains: “Only right now, I start to be honest with her about the Grand Slams, and I start to maybe to be more open with her, saying, like, all my problems on the Grand Slams, that actually I was afraid of something.”

• Elsewhere: Secondseed­ed Anett Kontaveit of Estonia and Irina-Camelia Begu of Romania advanced to the championsh­ip match in the inaugural Tennis in the Land at Cleveland. Kontaveit beat seventh-seeded Sara Sorribes Tormo of Spain 6-4, 6-4, and Begu topped sixthseede­d Magda Linette of Poland 7-6 (7-5), 6-2 in the WTA 250 tournament.

ETC.

• NFL: The Jacksonvil­le Jaguars traded backup quarterbac­k Gardner Minshew to the Philadelph­ia Eagles for a conditiona­l draft pick in 2022. The Jaguars received a sixthround pick that would become a fifth-rounder if Minshew plays 50% of snaps in three games. Minshew was a two-year starter in Jacksonvil­le, going 7-13 in 20 starts. He has completed 63% of his passes for 5,530 yards, 37 touchdowns and 11 intercepti­ons. ... The Tampa Bay Buccaneers confirmed that defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh has been added to the reserve/COVID-19 list, becoming the fourth player this week placed on the list. Suh, who was set to start Saturday night’s preseason game in Houston, joins kicker Ryan Succop and reserve offensive linemen Earl Watford and Nick Leverett on the list. Tennessee coach Mike Vrabel will miss the Titans’ preseason finale a week after testing positive for COVID-19, and a pair of coaches and another player have joined the protocols as the team’s outbreak grows. The Titans announced Saturday special teams coach Craig Aukerman, who missed a couple of practices under the NFL’s COVID-19 protocols, will be back for Saturday night’s game with Chicago.

• NBA: A Los Angeles police officer briefly pressed a knee to the neck of NBA player Jaxson Hayes as the New Orleans Pelicans center gasped “I can’t breathe” seconds before another officer used a Taser on him during a struggle, according to body camera video released Friday. The officers went to Hayes’ home in the Woodland Hills neighborho­od on July 28 around 3 a.m. after his girlfriend’s cousin called 911. The cousin said Hayes’ girlfriend was sending her text messages saying he had become loud and violent and she was scared. Hayes, who was not armed, became argumentat­ive after officers said he couldn’t go back into his home. He ignored requests from his girlfriend and his cousin to stop talking and struggling with the police as they tried to subdue him. The 21-year-old ultimately was booked into jail on accusation­s of resisting arrest after he was evaluated at a hospital for minor injuries. ... The Cleveland Cavaliers have agreed to acquire Lauri Markkanen, a restricted free agent forward from Chicago, in a three-way trade that will send forward Larry Nance Jr. from Cleveland to Portland. Markkanen is coming to the Cavs in a sign-andtrade agreement. The deal needs NBA approval before it can be completed. It could be a few more days before the trade becomes official. The Bulls are getting swingman Derrick Jones Jr. from the Trail Blazers along with a lottery-protected 2022 firstround pick. ... NBA referees will all be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s this season. The NBA announced Saturday that it has struck a deal with the National Basketball Referees Associatio­n on that requiremen­t. Part of the referees’ agreement with the NBA also says that those working games will receive booster shots once they become recommende­d. The NBRA voting on the issue took place earlier this week.

• Cycling: Romain Bardet won the mountainou­s 14th stage of the Spanish Vuelta at Pico Villuercas, Spain, while Odd Christian Eiking did well to limit the damage to his overall lead. Bardet, a three-time stage winner at the Tour de France, claimed his first win at the Spanish race after dropping the last of his companions in a breakaway on the day’s third and final climb. The French rider for DSM won the 103-mile route in western Spain in 4 hours, 20 minutes, 36 seconds. It was the 30-year-old Bardet’s first win at a Grand Tour since the 2017 Tour de France.

• College basketball: The University of Louisville is suspending head coach Chris Mack for six games for failing to follow procedures in handling an extortion attempt by one of his assistants. Mack “failed to follow university guidelines, policies, and procedures in handling the matter,” Louisville athletics director Vince Tyra said in a news release. ... West Virginia’s Bob Huggins has agreed to a two-year contract extension that includes the option for him to step aside or continue coaching after the 2023-24 season. Huggins earned his 900th coaching victory when the Mountainee­rs beat Morehead State in the NCAA Tournament in March.

 ?? SARAH STIER Getty Images ?? Sloane Stephens takes some practice swings Saturday prior to Monday’s start of the 2021 U.S. Open in New York.
SARAH STIER Getty Images Sloane Stephens takes some practice swings Saturday prior to Monday’s start of the 2021 U.S. Open in New York.

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