Sunday, January 27, 2019

The 2019 Australian Open: Promotions, Demotions, and Other Stats

2019 Australian Open Champions:
  • Novak Djokovic (Dai-Yokozuna)
  • Naomi Osaka (Sekiwake)

New Career Sanyaku Rank:

    Sanyaku Rank Changes
    Player (career rank if different) To From
    Promotions
    Naomi Osaka Yokozuna Sekiwake
    Petra Kvitova (ex-Ozeki) Sekiwake Maegashira
    Stefanos TsitsipasKomusubi Maegashira
    Danielle CollinsKomusubi Maegashira
    Demotions
    Angelique KerberSekiwake Ozeki
    Dominic ThiemKomusubi Sekiwake
    John IsnerKomusubi Sekiwake
    Simona Halep (ex-Ozeki)Komusubi Sekiwake
    Garbine Muguruza (ex-Ozeki)Komusubi Sekiwake
    Kevin Anderson (ex-Sekiwake)Maegashira Komusubi
    Jelena Ostapenko (ex-Ozeki)Maegashira Komusubi
    Anastasija SevastovaMaegashira Komusubi

    Kinboshi:
    ("gold star" - prize awarded to a non-sanyaku ranked competitor for beating an active Yokozuna):
    • Stefanos Tsitsipas - for beating Dai-Yokozuna Roger Federer in round 4

    Other noteworthy developments:
    • Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal played a pure Dai-Yokozuna final, the first since Roger Federer defeated Nadal in the 2017 Australian Open final.
    • Dai-Yokozuna Roger Federer loses active Yokozuna status, after not reaching a semifinal/two quarterfinals in the last four slams. He joins Andy Murray, Venus Williams and Maria Sharapova as inactive Yokozuna.
    • Ozeki Marin Cilic, Juan Martin del Potro, Madison Keys and Sloane Stephens all go kadoban after failing to reach the quarterfinals (del Potro sat out the tournament injured), and need to reach the quarterfinals at the 2019 French Open to hold rank.
    • Angelique Kerber gets demoted to Sekiwake but still enjoys limited rank protection: a semifinal at the 2019 French Open would bring her back to Ozeki
    • Ex-Ozeki Karolina Pliskova holds Sekiwake rank with a semifinal participation.

Sanyaku Ranks Following the 2019 Australian Open

Men
Career rank 1/ East Current Rank West Career rank 1/
High Sanyaku (Senior Champion Ranks)
Dai-Y Novak Djokovic Y Rafael NadalDai-Y
O Marin Cilic (k) O Juan Martin del Potro (k)O
Lower Sanyaku (Junior Champion Ranks)
S Kei Nishikori S --
S Dominic Thiem K1 John IsnerS
K Stefanos Tsitsipas K2 --


Women
Career rank 1/ East Current Rank West Career rank 1/
High Sanyaku (Senior Champion Ranks)
Dai-Y Serena Williams Y Naomi OsakaY
O Madison Keys (k) O Sloane Stephens (k)O
Lower Sanyaku (Junior Champion Ranks)
O Karolina Pliskova S1 Angelique Kerber (o)O
O Petra Kvitova S2 --
O Simona Halep K1 Garbine MuguruzaO
K Danielle Collins K2 --

1/ Highest sanyaku rank achieved in a player's career
Inactive Yokozuna: Roger Federer (Dai), Andy Murray, Venus Williams, Maria Sharapova
(k): kadoban Ozeki
(o): Sekiwake-Ozeki

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Naomi Osaka, Yokozuna

Naomi Osaka, Yokozuna
Naomi Osaka became the 18th female Yokozuna (= Grand Champion) of the open era last night, by beating resurgent ex-Ozeki (= Champion) Petra Kvitova in the final of the 2019 Australian Open in three sets.

Osaka is only the second player - after Jennifer Capriati - to jump straight from Sekiwake (Junior Champion I) to Yokozuna, achieved by winning the second grand slam title right after her maiden slam - last year's US Open. But while Capriati had a long career at the lower sanyaku ranks before breaking through to top level, Osaka came out of nowhere: she had not been in a grand slam quarterfinal before she started winning slams.

Osaka's rise from grand slam debutante to Yokozuna is also one of the fastest of the open era: she needed just 15 grand slam tournaments to climb to the top of the game - although the record is still held by Dai-Yokozuna (= Great Grand Champion) Monica Seles with 8 tournaments.

Yokozuna is - in contrast to the other sanyaku ranks (Ozeki, Sekiwake, Komusubi) - a rank for life: as her fellow Yokozuna, Osaka cannot be demoted, but only be declared 'inactive' if she fails to produce results befitting her rank in the years ahead.

A full update will follow once the men's final has been completed.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Naomi Osaka is on a Yokozuna Run

After Saturday's final, it will either be Osaka achieving a record-fast promotion to Yokozuna (= Grand Champion), or resurgent Petra Kvitova returning to Ozeki (= Champion) for the third time in her career.

A match with stakes as high as they come.

Monday, January 21, 2019

Naomi Osaka, Ozeki

Naomi Osaka became the 41st female Ozeki (=Champion) of the open era today by reaching the quarterfinals of the 2019 Australian Open, which follows on her maiden grand slam victory at the 2018 US Open (the Ozeki list will be updated once the tournament has been completed). Osaka could even make it to Yokozuna (=Grand Champion) if she wins the tournament. Moving from nowhere to Yokozuna within two slams would be a first in open era history. Osaka is also the first Japanese to reach Ozeki rank, in either the men's or the women's game.
 
Elsewhere, Dai-Yokozuna (=Great Grand Champion) Roger Federer lost active status after losing in the round of 16. Inactive Yokozuna Andy Murray lost in the first round and may retire. If it comes to this, we will pay our dues with an extra article on this page.

Further, the Australian Open turn out to be an Ozeki massacre, with Marin Cilic, Sloane Stephens, Madison Keys and Angelique Kerber all going out before the quarterfinals. Cilic, Stephens, Keys, and Juan Martin del Potro - who missed the Australian Open injured - go kadoban (they need to reach the quarterfinals at the 2019 French Open to defend the rank). Kerber was already kadoban and hence gets demoted to Sekiwake (=Junior Champion I) after the tournament.

Dai-Yokozuna Serena Williams, by contrast, reached the quarter-finals after a thriller against ex-Ozeki Simona Halep, and remains on-track to win her 24th grand slam title - which would have her take first place from Margaret Court in our open era ranking.