
The 27-year-old Japanese star won her first match since she suffered a back injury in the China Open in October at the ASB tennis classic in Auckland on Monday.
The seventh seeded Osaka overcame Lina Glushko of Israel in the first round, 6-4, 6-4.
Osaka said a pre-tournament press conference in Auckland on Sunday she was “humbled” by her form in 2024, during which she restarted her professional career after an approximately 15-month layoff after the birth of her first child. She concluded the season ranked No 58.
“I don’t think I’m the type of player that would hang around,” Osaka told reporters. “I have a lot of respect for all the players on tour, but the point of my life that I’m at right now, if I’m not over a certain ranking, I don’t see myself playing for a while.
“I’d rather spend time with my daughter if I’m not where I think I should be, and where I feel like I can be.”
Osaka had a 22-17 win-loss singles record in 2024, reaching the quarterfinals in Doha and at s-Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands.
“I think 2024 humbled me, but I also feel like I grew a lot,” she added. “I worked considerably harder than I’ve ever done before. So, in that, I guess it was quite hard to not achieve the outcomes I wanted, but I feel like I’m growing and learning and I am really excited about this year (2025).
“I played pretty nice matches. People still talk to me about my Iga (Swiatek) match at the French Open (lost 7-6 1-6 7-5). So I’m delighted that I was able to give people memories as well.
“Even though I got injured in Beijing, which was my last tournament, I feel pretty optimistic about how that match would have turned out (against Coco Gauff), and I am excited to play on hard courts again.”
Osaka won the Australian Open in 2019 and 2021, and the US Open in 2018 and 2020. She believes she still has a great love for tennis, despite recent injury setbacks.
“I’ve been playing tennis since I was three, and a huge part of that I owe to my parents, but I never really saw my life doing anything else,” she said. “Then, when I sat there and had the opportunity to do other things, I realized that I’d rather be playing tennis.
“So, it was kind of one of those realization moments where you feel like you thought you were forced to do something, but in actuality you very much truly loved it.”