Tennis

Andreescu recalls journey to tennis return that made Australian Open win possible

Bianca Andreescu traces the path that brought her back to the tennis tour after a mental health break — and, on Monday, put her back in the win column, thanks to beating a seeded opponent at the Australian Open.

Mississauga, Ont. native claims 1st-round win over No. 25 seed Marie Bouzkova

Bianca Andreescu of Canada waves with her right hand as she walks onto the court ahead of her first-round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia.
Bianca Andreescu of Canada waves as she walks onto the court ahead of her first-round match against Marie Bouzkova of the Czech Republic at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Monday, Jan. 16, 2023. (Ng Han Guan/The Associated Press)

Bianca Andreescu traces the path that brought her back to the tennis tour after a mental health break — and, on Monday, put her back in the win column, thanks to beating a seeded opponent at the Australian Open — to what she calls "an 'Aha' moment" on a beach in Costa Rica during a spiritual retreat nearly a year ago.

Here, then, is how the 22-year-old from Mississauga, Ont., described that epiphany in an interview with The Associated Press at Melbourne Park: "I am meant to play the sport and use it as a platform to be an inspiration for others."

Andreescu, who beat Serena Williams in the 2019 U.S. Open final as a teenager, went through a series of health issues, including catching COVID-19, that derailed her career in 2020 and slowed her in 2021, too. She also split from her long-time coach. There was a lot going on — after beating No. 25 seed Marie Bouzkova 6-2, 6-4 at Court 3 on Monday, Andreescu used the word "hectic" to describe that period — and she went six months without playing a match from October 2021 to April 2022, including sitting out last year's Australian Open.

"That was when I started to ask myself the question: Is this worth it? Is this life worth it? Because I was very stressed out with many things: People in my life; the way I was looking at myself in the mirror," Andreescu said. "Just holding a tennis racket, I didn't feel happy anymore. Or content. Because usually, going on the court is my getaway place — and it stopped feeling like that."

She realized she needed to re-evaluate where she was and where she was headed.

WATCH | Andreescu cruises into 2nd round of Australian Open:

Andreescu cruises to an easy 1st round win at Australian Open

2 years ago
Duration 1:05
Bianca Andreescu scored an easy 6-2, 6-4 straight sets win over No. 25-ranked Marie Bouzkova of the Czech Republic at the Australian Open.

"Do I keep pushing and pushing and hope for the best? Or do I take a step back? So that's what I did. I took a break. And I did other things outside of tennis. I did a lot of charity work. I travelled to a few places. Hung out with friends I hadn't hung out with in two or three years. I started playing soccer again. I did some skating. I started martial arts. I did dancing. A bunch of other things. And it really made me appreciate tennis even more," Andreescu said with a wide smile. "I honestly didn't know when I was going to pick up a racket again."

During her time in Costa Rica last February, Andreescu found a new frame of mind.

"I felt much better in 2022 than I did in 2021, when after losses, I felt so discouraged," she said. "Now I just want to get back on court. I feel very motivated."

Journey continues

Sure seemed that way against Bouzkova, a U.S. Open quarterfinalist last year.

Andreescu mixed up her shots and overpowered her foe when opting for big cuts on groundstrokes.

"Just didn't give me much space to breathe and to sort of get my momentum going," Bouzkova said.

Andreescu said she felt a mix of nerves and relief at the end Monday, because she really wanted to win.

Which she did and now will face 100th-ranked Cristina Bucsa of Spain as the journey continues.

"I like to say what my mom always tells me: 'Follow your heart.' That's what I did. I have a strong intuition, I would say, and I feel like a lot of other people do. So trust your gut," Andreescu said, pointing her interlocking fingers toward her heart. "If you don't feel good in something for a while — I didn't feel good for two or three months — I would say to take a step back, if you can."

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