Naomi Osaka shows off baby bump during Japan getaway

Tennis star Naomi Osaka treated fans to a sneak peek of her blossoming baby bump while out and about in Japan.

Sharing a carousel of pics with her 2.7 million Instagram followers, Osaka could be seen wearing a crop top that showed off her growing bump.

The 25-year-old tennis star is expecting her first child with boyfriend and rapper Cordae.

As her due date approaches, the 4-time Grand Slam winner took a trip to Japan where she posed for snaps in between some sightseeing.

The soon-to-be mom captioned the post with the Japanese flag.

“Mama in Japan 🇯🇵😍 better not delete this!!!!!!!” fellow tennis star Sloane Stephens wrote in the comments section.


The tennis star showed off her baby bump for the first time.
Instagram/@naomiosaka

Osaka later shared a close-up photo of her bump on her Instagram Story.

The two-time US Open winner announced in January that she’s expecting her first baby after dropping out of the Australian Open.

Taking to social media, the tennis ace posted a photo of a sonogram.


Naomi Osaka
She later showed her bump from a closer angle on her Instagram Story.
Instagram/@naomiosaka

“The past few years have been interesting to say the least, but I find that it’s the most challenging times in life that may be the most fun,” wrote Osaka, who has been dating Cordae since 2019.

“These few months away from the sport has really given me a new love and appreciation for the game I’ve dedicated my life to.”

“I realize that life is so short and I don’t take any moments for granted, everyday is a new blessing and adventure. I know that I have so much to look forward to in the future, one thing I’m looking forward to is for my kid to watch one of my matches and tell someone, ‘that’s my mom,’ haha.”


Osaka and Cordae have been dating since 2019.
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Osaka said she plans to return for the Australian Open in 2024.

“2023 will be a year that’ll be full of lessons for me and I hope I’ll see you guys in the start of the next one cause I’ll be at Aus 2024. Love you all infinitely,” she went on.

“[Side note]: I don’t think there’s a perfectly correct path to take in life but I always felt that if you move forward with good intentions you’ll find your way eventually.”

Osaka and the rapper, who remains tight-lipped about their relationship, were first spotted together at a Clippers game in 2019.



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YouTube star JiDion gets haircut during Kyrgios’ US Open match

The U.S. Open turned into a barbershop on Tuesday night.

YouTube star JiDion, who was sitting in the front row during a night session match between Nick Kyrgios and Karen Khachanov, was shown getting a haircut as spectators looked on with a mixture of shock and bemusement.

Believe it or not, this wasn’t the first time a sporting venue served as a makeshift barbershop.

A couple of weeks ago during a Yankees’ loss to the Rays, the Bleacher Creatures decided to get into the hair-cutting business.

And JiDion apparently wanted a viral clip, too.

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Carlos Alcaraz vs. Marin Cilic odds, tennis picks

We’re now into Week 2 of the 2022 US Open and according to the odds, the men’s side of the draw now looks like a three-horse race between Nick Kyrgios, Carlos Alcaraz, and Rafael Nadal. 

Kyrgios is the new betting favorite to win the tournament at +200, just ahead of Nadal (+260) and Alcaraz (+360), but those numbers should become even tighter on Monday night if the two Spaniards join the Aussie in the quarterfinals. 


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Marin Cilic
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US Open predictions: Carlos Alcaraz vs. Marin Cilic

While Nadal takes on American Frances Tiafoe on Monday afternoon, Alcaraz is set to lock horns with 2014 US Open champion Marin Cilic. The 20-year-old wunderkind is a -550 favorite over the Croatian, who comes into the Round of 16 having dropped just one set (in a tie-breaker to Dan Evans) in the tournament so far. 

Cilic is something of an anomaly to handicap, as he does seem to find a new level when he plays in the biggest tournaments. The 33-year-old has made 14 quarterfinals, six semi-finals and three finals in his Grand Slam career, with his lone win coming at this event eight years ago. A shot-maker with a great serve, Cilic can be unplayable if everything is working right, but that’s not something you can count on at this stage of his career — especially against a physical phenom like Alcaraz.

Already one of the best players in the world at 20 years of age, Alcaraz’s ability to defend and extend rallies should prove vital against Cilic, who often relies on his serve to get himself out of jams. If Alcaraz is on, Cilic’s powerful serve won’t be a get-out-of-jail card like it is against other players. 

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Carlos Alcaraz of Spain celebrates
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You don’t have to go that far back to see how a matchup between these two very different tennis players can look like. Alcaraz made relatively light work of Cilic in the Round of 16 at the Cincinnati Masters, winning 7-6, 6-1 in a match that Alcaraz grew into as it went on. 

A similar pattern could play out on Monday night as Alcaraz’s ability to defend against the serve and keep rallies going should tire out the Croatian as we get into the deep part of the match. That should allow Alcaraz to score a dominant set or two to get the separation needed to cover a 6.5-game spread.

Carlos Alcaraz vs. Marin Cilic tennis pick

The Bet: Carlos Alcaraz -6.5 games (+105, BetMGM)

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Rafael Nadal beats Richard Gasquet for 18th time

Rafael Nadal could not find his form Thursday night in a second-round struggle at the U.S. Open, a squeaker of a win over Fabio Fognini during which the Spaniard bloodied himself when his own racket ricocheted off the court and hit the bridge of his nose.

One round and two days later, Nadal found the perfect remedy: his personal punching bag.

The second-seeded Nadal cruised past Richard Gasquet for the 18th time as a professional, remaining undefeated against his childhood friend, in a 6-0, 6-1, 7-5 win Saturday night at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Nadal, the 22-time Grand Slam champion, will face American Frances Tiafoe, the 22nd seed, in the Round of 16.

Until the fourth game of the second set, Nadal did not lose a game to Gasquet. By that point, a pro-Nadal crowd had temporarily switched its allegiance and had begun pulling for the underdog, trying to power Gasquet, perhaps not to a win, but at least to a competitive match.

Rafael Nadal celebrates after his third-round win over Richard Gasquet.
Larry Marano

The crowd got on its feet to applaud the 36-year-old Gasquet as he took the game — more than an hour into the match — but one game could not bring him far. The Frenchman has not won a set from Nadal since 2008, losing 34 straight, though he came close in the third set Saturday.

Gasquet made his first and only charge when he won four straight games in the third set by rushing the net more often, and went ahead 5-4.

But Nadal, both 36 and ageless, responded by winning the last three games of the match. Nadal finished off Gasquet with a powerful serve that led to a backhand forced error, and then allowed his emotion to turn into a pumped fist.

Nadal won 100 points to 71 from Gasquet, who seemed to have chances all match, but never could win them when they mattered.

Gasquet won just one of seven break points in a match that, until the third set, was filled with long rallies from behind the baseline, playing right into Nadal’s hands.

Better than playing into his nose.

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Frances Tiafoe tops Jason Kubler in US Open second round

Frances Tiafoe launched the ball into the stands and threw both his fists high in the air. 

The 22nd-seeded American punched his ticket to the third round of the U.S. Open by defeating Australia’s Jason Kubler 7-6(3), 7-5, 7-6(2) in a tight match at the Grandstand on Thursday night. 

The second-round matchup was seemingly Tiafoe’s to lose, but Kubler’s steady improvement as of late made the 29-year-old an intriguing player heading into the match. Tiafoe will now face the 14th-seeded Diego Schwartzman, who also advanced with a three-set win over Alexei Popyrin on Thursday. 

“I think anybody can win,” Tiafoe said after defeating fellow American Marcos Giron on Tuesday before referring to the effect of then-world No. 40 Nick Kyrgios’ runner-up finish at Wimbledon. “I mean, anyone who’s really got the game.” 

Frances Tiafoe advanced to the third round of the US Open.
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Similarly to the tiebreaker of the first set, which he secured 7-3, Tiafoe jumped out to a quick 5-1 lead before ultimately edging Kubler 7-2. Known for having a big service game, Tiafoe played to his strength and won 70 percent of his first-serve points. He also blasted 13 aces in comparison to Kubler’s 10 and double faulted only three times. 

Having reached the ATP Houston quarterfinals in addition to losing to Sebastian Baez in the title game of the Estoril Open, Tiafoe has had a relatively strong season thus far. He also went on a run to the semifinals of the Atlanta Open and the quarterfinals of the Citi Open. 

Kubler, who has a heavy-hitting style and plays defensively from the baseline, has primarily done well as a doubles player this season. He reached the mixed doubles final at the Australian Open and the men’s doubles summit clash at the Atlanta Open. After his first-round matchup against Mikael Ymer was suspended due to rain on Tuesday, Kubler ultimately won 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. 

A 24-year-old, unseeded Tiafoe memorably advanced to the fourth round of the U.S. Open in 2020 before he ultimately lost in three straight sets to Daniil Medvedev.

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Nick Kyrgios complains about smelling marijuana at US Open

First, there was the woman at the Wimbledon final who looked like she’d had “700 drinks, bro.” This time, it was the smell of weed that set off Nick Kyrgios.

The 27-year-old Aussie was deep in the second set of his second-round match against Benjamin Bonzi Wednesday evening at the U.S. Open when he turned to the chair umpire and started complaining about the whiff of marijuana apparently in the air at Louis Armstrong Stadium.

Up a set and at 4-3 on serve in the second, Kyrgios asked the umpire to issue a warning to the crowd after claiming he had seen and smelled someone smoking marijuana. On the way to his bench during a changeover, Kyrgios sniped, “You don’t even want to remind anyone not to do it?”

The umpire seemed to think Kyrgios was complaining about the smell of food, though, which didn’t go over well with the combustible Aussie.

“It was f–king marijuana,” he shot back. “Obviously I’m not going to be complaining about food stuff. Obviously not.

Nick Kyrgios
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“Obviously when athletes are running side-to-side and they have asthma already it’s probably not ideal.”

The umpire addressed the crowd as the two players returned to the court, saying, “Ladies and gentlemen, a reminder that you cannot smoke on court.”

The ESPN broadcast also said their reporter on the scene likewise confirmed the smell of marijuana. Then Kyrgios went on to close out the second set, 6-4.

It was hardly the last of his blow-ups, though. Kyrgios was issued a code of conduct warning for spitting on the court after being broken late in the third set, which he went on to lose, 6-4.

It also wasn’t the first time Kyrgios found himself amid a marijuana controversy at the U.S. Open. Six years ago, he caused a stir during the tournament when he responded to a Twitter follower confirming that players on tour are allowed to smoke weed. A WADA spokesperson later confirmed that marijuana is prohibited during competition but is not banned when used outside of competition.

The good news for Kyrgios? Marijuana is also legal in New York, so there’s little chance anyone will sue him for defamation.

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Bianca Andreescu begs for US Open outfit swap after wardrobe issue

Bianca Andreescu pleaded with an umpire Monday to make an outfit change during her first-round match at the 2022 U.S. Open, voicing how her attire was “so bad” in the blustery conditions.

The 22-year-old Canadian faced France’s Harmony Tan in the opening round on the Grandstand, where the wind gusts appeared to impact her wardrobe and performance, per Reuters. Andreescu then implored the chair umpire as to why she needed to swap her apparel.

Bianca Andreescu is seen chatting with the chair umpire about her apparel at the 2022 U.S. Open.
Twitter/@andys_murray

“But can this not count as one of my changeovers? I mean it’s not my fault, it’s Nike’s fault,” Andreescu said of her sponsor. “This dress is so, so bad… I need to go, this is really bad.”

Andreescu ultimately got her wish and changed into a white tank top and skirt. A short time after the former world No. 4 defeated Tan, 6-0, 3-6, 6-1, she apologized to Nike during her post-match press conference.

“I meant no disrespect with what I said to the umpire. I was trying to convince him to not take away that washroom break, cause I know we only get two. He was very nice to say it was totally okay,” Andreescu said.

Bianca Andreescu during her first-round match against Harmony Tan at the 2022 U.S. Open on August 29, 2022.
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Bianca Andreescu defeated Harmony Tan in her first-round match at the 2022 U.S. Open on August 29, 2022.
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“I could have definitely used a different choice of wording. So I apologize to anyone I disrespected. I love Nike and I hope I can be with them for the rest of my life,” Andreescu said.

Andreescu, the 2019 U.S. Open champ, will battle Beatriz Haddad Maia of Brazil on Wednesday in the second round.

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Hugh Jackman, Anna Wintour take in Serena Williams’ US Open match

Serena Williams brought out the stars.

The 40-year-old had quite the cheering section for the start of her final go-round at Flushing Meadows, a Monday night matchup against Danka Kovinic.

“The crowd was crazy,” Serena told CBS’ Gayle Williams post-match. “Really helped pull me through.”

Chief among her well-wishers was Serena’s four-year-old daughter Olympia, who was a staple of ESPN’s coverage, shouting for mom, eating a lollipop, and playing around with Reddit founder and dad Alexis Ohanian in the player’s box.

Serena Williams’s daughter Olympia and husband Alexis Ohanian take pictures and cheer.
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Vogue Magazine Anna Wintour focuses in on the match between Williams and Kovinic.
Getty Images/Elsa

Olympia wore a sequined outfit similar to Serena’s, her hair festooned with white beads in an apparent homage to her mom’s hairstyle from her first U.S. Open title in 1999.

Also seated in Serena’s box was Anna Wintour, the editor of Vogue magazine, which served as the outlet for the 23-time Grand Slam champion’s retirement announcement.

Mayor Eric Adams took in the spectacle, as well.

Spike Lee found his way on the 2022 US Open court for the coin toss.

“She inspired so many young people to see that there’s no limitation,” Adams said before the match. “She has done so much to this generation of introducing tennis into their lives.”

Elsewhere in the crowd, boxer Mike Tyson sat next to tennis legend Martina Navratilova and petted her dog, Lulu.

Director Spike Lee took part in an on-court coin toss before the matchup. Queen Latifah, who narrated a highlight video of Serena, took in the action from the stands as well.

Actress Rebel Wilson and actors Anthony Anderson and Hugh Jackman were in the crowd, as were Katie Couric, Matt Damon, Gayle King and Lindsey Vonn.

Actor Hugh Jackman and Anthony Anderson sit in the stands as Serena Williams celebrates her win.
NY POST

Perhaps the oddest sighting at Arthur Ashe Stadium was the pairing of President Bill Clinton and 94-year-old sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer. The two were shown engaging in conversation, including a playful slap from Westheimer to Clinton’s face.



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Biden screws the frugal, America’s real polarization and other commentary

Libertarian: Biden Screws the Frugal

The problem with President Biden’s student-loan forgiveness “runs far beyond finances,” fumes Fiona Harrigan at Reason: Consider the “many college graduates who made strategic choices to avoid taking on debt in the first place.” Her parents “convinced me that starting my adult life that far in the hole wasn’t worth the tradeoff.” So she “quietly retired the list of schools I truly wanted to attend.” With “$35,000 annually in merit aid” and “some strategic choices, my college education never cost more than $2,000 per year.” “I never lived on campus. I took on heavy course loads and cashed in on AP credits to finish school a semester early. . . . At times, I worked three jobs to afford travel to internship and conference opportunities, as well as the nontuition costs of my education.” Now she’s “wondering which opportunities I unnecessarily gave up in the name of saving and scrimping.”

Populist: America’s Real Polarization

Obsessing about “partisan polarization” misses “the real division” now, argues Michael McKenna at The Washington Times: “the chasm between those for whom society and its institutions are working just fine and those for whom society and its institutions are either not working at all or are actively working against.” That holds not just for the Biden “student loan disaster,” which makes “the working class pay for the education of the well-off,” but also “Inflation Reduction Act” spending: “Just about all of the $380 billion . . . will wind up in the pockets of company executives, stockholders and those well-off enough to buy electric vehicles (average price now more than $66,000), cutting-edge heat pumps, solar panels.” Add the bipartisan CHIPS “legislation in which Congress gave $75 billion to semiconductor manufacturers that, combined, have made nearly $250 billion in profits in the last five years.”

Pandemic journal: No Djokovic at US Open

Novak Djokovic is “arguably the world’s greatest tennis player,” but “tennis fans won’t see him on one of its biggest stages at the U.S. Open” as the feds won’t let unvaccinated noncitizens into America, complains The Hill’s Joe Concha. “And it’s all for nothing”: Djokovic has natural immunity from 2020 and 2021 COVID bouts. And “we’re seeing triple-vaccinated people contracting coronavirus.” If it’s “about public health and safety,” “explain why Djokovic, nowhere near anyone on a court, cannot play while more than 23,000 fans fill Arthur Ashe Stadium” without “showing the same vaccination card Djokovic is required to present.”

Elex watch: DeSantis Foe Must Want To Lose

Ron DeSantis’ Democratic opponent, Rep. Charlie Crist, “seems determined to lose” Florida’s race for governor, smirks Corey DeAngelis at The Wall Street Journal: As his running mate, he chose Karla Hernández-Mats, president of Miami’s United Teachers of Dade and America Federation of Teachers veep. She and the UTD opposed school reopenings in 2020, and the AFT “successfully lobbied the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to tighten school-reopening guidelines, which kept schools elsewhere closed.” She has also “publicly disdained parents” and opposed school choice. “Crist might have learned something from Virginia, where Democrat Terry McAuliffe last year failed to regain the governorship” after saying he didn’t think parents should be telling schools what to teach.

Historian: Dems’ ‘Fascist’ Confusion

“For the Left, Donald Trump is synonymous with ‘fascism’ ” yet did Trump “illegally” nullify $300 billion” in student-loan debt to shore up his base before the midterms? asks Victor Davis Hanson at American Greatness. Or “weaponize the IRS” — sic it on Joe or Hunter Biden, amid evidence of possible corruption on the son’s laptop? “Weaponize the FBI”? Did agents’ texts discuss how to stop Biden’s election bid? Did the ex-prez order a raid on President Barack Obama or Biden’s homes? “In fact, of the last three presidents, Trump was either the most inept or indifferent, or the most obstructed” in using government agencies “for his own partisan political advantage.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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Taylor Fritz knows his time is now

The question has been asked so many times that it’s become a cliche: When is an American going to win a men’s Grand Slam title in tennis?

“We joke about the question,” 24-year-old Taylor Fritz told The Post ahead of this year’s U.S. Open. “It comes up so much. I’ve been hearing it since I was 18.”

Taylor Fritz tries to hit a tennis ball from the stands into a tub on the court with members of Dude Perfect during Arthur Ashe Kids Day.
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“I don’t think it’s a flag issue,” Frances Tiafoe, also 24, added.

In case you haven’t heard the joke, or you’ve been living in a cave for the last two decades, the last time a men’s player from the U.S. won a major was nearly 20 years ago, when Andy Roddick captured the 2003 U.S. Open, where he beat Juan Carlos Ferrera in straight sets.

What’s happened since?

Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer, of course. The Big 3 have combined for 62 of their collective 63 majors in that span, with Federer’s 2003 Wimbledon victory the lone stand out.

But with Federer still out as he recovers from knee surgery, Djokovic watching from home because of his refusal to get the COVID-19 vaccine and Nadal coming off an abdominal tear that knocked him out of the Wimbledon semifinals, there is more than just hope for everyone else.

As for the Americans’ best chances, take your pick.

Six of them in the draw are ranked in the top 50 in the world — Fritz, Tiafoe, Tommy Paul, Max Cressy, Jenson Brooksby and Jon Isner. Just outside that group is 52nd-ranked and 22-year-old Sebastian Korda, who many in tennis say has the most talent among the group. But he’s still young and lacks experience on the big stage, having only twice gotten beyond the third round of a major.

Similarly, 19-year-old Ben Shelton is poised to be “The Next Big Thing” in U.S. men’s tennis. The University of Florida alum recently turned pro and in just two months reached his first Challenger final, won his first ATP match and secured his first top-five victory. The future looks bright for the son of former tour player Bryan Shelton, but again, experience.

If there is one American whose time should be now, though, it’s Fritz — and he knows it.

“I’m really over [being] close,” Fritz told The Post. “I’ve been close to beating [the Big 3] for years. I’ve taken that ‘positive’ [of a good match] away too many times. I can’t be happy about almost winning anymore.”

Early in the year, it looked like maybe he was over it. Two months after blowing a two-sets-to-one lead against Stefanos Tsitsipas in the round of 16 at the Australian Open, he knocked off Nadal in straight sets at Indian Wells for his first ATP 1000 Series title. A few months later, he beat Cressy to claim another title at Eastbourne the week before Wimbledon.

Taylor Fritz reacts to a point during his match against Andrey Rublev at the Western & Southern Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center.
Susan Mullane/USA TODAY Sports

Then came another showdown against Nadal, this time at the All England Club. Fritz was twice a game away from knocking out the wounded Spaniard and reaching the semifinals, only to lose in a grueling five-set tiebreak. Going into the match, Fritz felt good given his earlier victory. He left devastated, and pissed off.

“To be able to beat one of those guys when there’s a title on the line and play a clean match and not be scared of it is big,” he told The Post. “I was so much more confident because I’d already beaten him and grass is suited for me. I was more upset that I lost.”

The next month in Washington D.C., though, Fritz was simply “embarrassed” after retiring from heat exhaustion in his Round of 16 match against Dan Evans, who was up 3-6, 7-6(6), 4-1 when he quit. He later apologized on social media.

Perhaps it was a wake-up call.

Earlier this month in Cincinnati, Fritz dusted arguably the hottest player on the planet, Wimbledon runner-up and Citi Open champ Nick Kyrgios, 6-3, 6-2, in the second round. Then against world No. 1 Daniil Medvedev, he fell in straight sets in the quarterfinals.

A reputation also persists — Taylor Fritz enjoys being Taylor Fritz a little too much, whether it’s the model girlfriend, starring in a Netflix documentary about life on tour or enjoying the spoils of being young, good looking and talented. 

Still, there are reasons for the hard-hitting American with a big forehand to be optimistic when it comes to going deep in Flushing. He’s 35-14 this season, has the two titles on his resume, beaten Nadal once already and has reached at least the fourth round in two of the year’s first three majors.

“If grass isn’t my best surface, hard courts are,” said Fritz, whose best result in the U.S. Open is twice reaching the third round. “I haven’t done historically well this time of year in the past, but I’m also such a different player than I’ve been any other years since end of last year. My game has gone to another level, so I’m excited to go into this for the first time as a different player.”

We’ll see.

At least he doesn’t have to worry about most of The Big 3, and that could go a long way.

“You’re playing in an era of the three best players of all time playing at the same time,” Fritz said. “It’s just now starting to feel like I can contest those guys or win titles. When I was 18 or 19, it was, just hope you get a good draw.”



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