Japanese veteran Date bows out in tears after 'double bagel'

AFP
The former world No. 4 who turns 47 later this month, was simply no match for a Serbian opponent who at 24 is young enough to be Date's daughter.
AFP
Japanese veteran Date bows out in tears after 'double bagel'
AFP

Fans applaud Japan's Kimiko Date during a ceremony after the last match of her career against Serbian Aleksandra Krunic in the first round of the Japan Women's Open in Tokyo on September 12, 2017. Date retired from professional tennis just shy of her 47th birthday.

Japan's Kimiko Date, the grande dame of women's tennis, bowed out of the sport after being thrashed 0-6, 0-6 by Aleksandra Krunic at the Japan Women's Open on Tuesday.

The former world No. 4, who turns 47 later this month, was simply no match for a Serbian opponent who at 24 is young enough to be Date's daughter.

Krunic took just 49 minutes to inflict the dreaded "double bagel" on Date in a lop-sided first-round encounter in Tokyo.

Date tried gamely to mix up her shots in the second set but to no avail as Krunic, ranked 67th in the world, blasted winners past her at will.

Krunic continued to swing away from the baseline and put the former Wimbledon semifinalist out of her misery with a huge forehand which Date could only dump into the net.

"It's finally over," a tearful Date told fans, many of whom were sobbing themselves.

"I feel sad mostly I guess but also really grateful for what tennis has given me," added the eight-time WTA Tour singles champion, who took a 12-year hiatus from professional tennis after quitting at the peak of her powers in 1996.

Date, a wiry 1.63 meters, underwent two knee surgeries since appearing at the 2016 Australian Open, but defied the odds to return to action in May this year.

The Kyoto native has also been nursing a sore shoulder and it showed against Krunic.

Date, whose game is a throwback to a time when tennis was more about lobs, dinks and clever use of spin than power-hitting, showed brief glimpses of her former pomp.

But she lacked the power to trouble Krunic, who after embracing Date told her she had started the match as a nervous wreck.

"I want to apologize," she said. "I don't like that I had to be the one but Kimiko has had a great career.

"I was a mess at the beginning," added Krunic, who next faces American Alison Riske.

"When I go back to the locker room, I'll probably cry."

Date broke several tennis records, most notably at the Korea Open in 2009 when she became the second-oldest player in the modern era to win a WTA singles title after Billie Jean King. She reached her highest ranking of 4 in late 1995, behind Steffi Graf, Monica Seles and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.

Despite playing on until the ripe old age of 46, Date still fell some way short of her idol Martina Navratilova, who retired a month shy of her 50th birthday in 2006.


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