It was a well-known scene, one repeated all through the years by first-time grand slam winners; Daniil Medvedev additionally fell to the ground as he gained his maiden grand slam a day after Raducanu, as did Dominic Thiem a yr earlier than that.

However after this euphoric second, there typically appears to be a spot earlier than that pinnacle might be reached once more — 34 of the 45 first-time grand slam winners since 2000 have endured a wait of no less than a yr for an additional, in the event that they gained a second title in any respect.

Williams herself needed to wait two-and-a-half years to win her second grand slam.

‘Depth of self-belief in contrast to the rest’

Alongside Williams, tennis has been dominated for 20 years by gamers for whom shedding appears tougher than profitable — Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic.

Profitable significantly a couple of grand slam has change into normalized, even anticipated, considerably obscuring the difficulties of claiming that first one.

In tennis, a lonely particular person sport requiring fixed journey for 10 months of the yr throughout completely different time zones and environments, the psychological strain of profitable a grand slam is completely different in comparison with different sports activities.

“Numerous instances when there’s social help, I look to my left, I look to my proper, I see my teammate to provide me a fist pump … That sort of social help can go a extremely great distance for a person to handle efficiency anxiousness,” sports activities psychologist Dr Jarrod Spencer explains to CNN Sport.

“However [when] it is simply one-on-one, you look to your left and your proper and also you notice that you simply’re alone. That requires a depth of self-belief that’s in contrast to the rest.”

And with a novel scoring system that creates jeopardy on nearly each level, a lot of taking part in tennis is “really up within the head,” as Eurosport skilled and former world No. 7 Barbara Schett tells CNN.

Profitable would appear to create a virtuous circle, deepening self-belief which in flip builds confidence to be deployed at essential factors in tight matches.

“Once I was prime 10,” Schett says, “I used to be on the stage the place I went on the courtroom and I believed, ‘I am not going to lose this match. There’s completely no likelihood.’ I can solely think about how … the legends of our recreation would really feel after they’re stepping on the courtroom.”

Schett performed Williams 3 times in her profession and by no means defeated her. They met for the final time on the French Open in 2003 and Schett misplaced 6-0 6-0.

Barbara Schett played Serena Williams during the third round of the French Open.

“I had already misplaced the match earlier than I performed in opposition to her as a result of her presence on the courtroom was simply unbelievable,” Schett recollects.

“I simply felt like, ‘How am I going to beat this lady? She’s bodily so significantly better. She performs a lot more durable. She believes in herself. And I had higher simply go to the locker room.'”

However profitable can result in a way of fallibility in addition to invincibility, creating a brand new set of expectations and objectives to be reckoned with.

‘Perfection does not exist’

Within the aftermath of Raducanu’s US Open triumph, pundits rushed to hail her as a future a number of grand slam winner on account of her highly effective groundstrokes and persistently aggressive return of serve.

She gathered sponsor after sponsor and PR consultants branded her with the potential to change into Britain’s first billion-dollar sport star.
“Everybody simply anticipated me to win each single event I used to be ever going to play once more. It is a bit unrealistic as a result of perfection simply does not exist,” Raducanu mentioned in a current interview with Nike.

A succession of accidents has marred Raducanu’s first full yr on tour with blisters, again points, facet strains and hip accidents all forcing her to withdraw from numerous tournaments all through the season.

Emma Raducanu played, and defeated, Serena Williams two weeks ago in Cincinnati.

In her three grand slam appearances since these magical two weeks in New York, Raducanu has reached simply the second spherical, falling to gamers ranked decrease than her each time.

“There’s plenty of expectation externally on her,” Schett says. “Clearly, she desires to win one other one. She desires to show to all people that she wasn’t a someday marvel or a two week marvel and that she will do extra, however the strain and the expectations are extraordinarily excessive in her case.”

For a 19-year-old competing in her first yr on the WTA Tour, it has been a stable, if unremarkable season, however the stratospheric expectations surrounding the Brit have reframed each loss as one thing resembling a catastrophic failure.

‘That time of satiation’

Objectives, in addition to expectations, alter within the aftermath of a serious victory like a grand slam title.

Dominic Thiem has skilled the same trajectory to Raducanu since profitable his maiden grand slam on the 2020 US Open, plummeting out of the higher echelons of the sport to a rating as little as world No. 352.

A lingering wrist harm hampered the Austrian, as did coming to phrases along with his new standing as a grand slam winner.

“While you struggle for a aim, you permit every little thing for it and also you obtain it, every little thing adjustments,” Thiem informed the Austrian newspaper Der Customary in April 2021.

“Nevertheless, in tennis, every little thing goes very quick, you do not have time to benefit from the victory, and if you’re not 100%, you lose. It occurred to me this yr.”

Dominic Thiem celebrates winning the 2020 US Open final against Alexander Zverev.

To elucidate the psychological results of attaining a serious aim, Spencer compares it to a extra on a regular basis expertise — consuming.

“While you’re hungry, you will do no matter it takes to get some meals,” he says. “After which when you attain that time of satiation the place you simply really feel full, then it is like, I can not eat one other chew, I do not need something for fairly a while.”

“And so it’s extremely regular and pure, identical to consuming a giant meal that typically an athlete, after they win one thing actually vital would possibly simply lose a little bit little bit of drive for a short time.”

The emotional prices of elite sport have gotten extra evident yearly as athletes start to speak brazenly about psychological well being and its significance.

On the French Open final yr, four-time grand slam winner Naomi Osaka withdrew to guard her psychological well being after a furor erupted following her refusal to conduct post-match press conferences.
Afterwards, she revealed that she had “suffered lengthy bouts of melancholy” and “large waves of hysteria” since her first grand slam triumph in 2018.

Iga Swiatek, in the meantime, hailed her sports activities psychologist Daria Abramowicz for the function that she performed serving to her win the French Open in 2020.

‘Many, many issues have occurred’

Managing the “emotional vitality” which sport depletes is vital to recalibrating an athlete’s objectives and expectations, Spencer explains.

Thiem has begun to rebuild after his yr within the wilderness, profitable his first ATP Tour match in 14 months with a victory within the first spherical in opposition to of the Bastad Open in opposition to Finland’s Emil Ruusuvuori in July 2022.

“My final victory was in Rome in 2021, it seems like a distinct world someway,” he mentioned afterwards, in keeping with the BBC.

“Many, many issues occurred. It was powerful, however it was additionally an excellent expertise, I believe, for all times generally. I am so glad that I obtained this primary victory right here at present.”

Dominic Thiem reached the quarterfinal of the Austrian Open in July this year.

In current weeks, Raducanu too has proven glints of the shape that propelled her to tennis stardom with victories in opposition to Williams and Victoria Azarenka on the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati earlier than she misplaced to Jessica Pegula within the third spherical — simply her second ever match in opposition to a prime 10 participant.

She is going to face Alizé Cornet within the first spherical of the US Open as she begins her title protection, whereas Thiem — additionally showing on the event for the primary time since profitable it — will play Pablo Carreño Busta.