WIMBLEDON

After long layoff, Sloane Stephens sees some positives in Wimbledon loss

Sandra Harwitt
Special for USA TODAY Sports
Sloane Stephens (USA) in action during her match against Alison Riske (USA) during Wimbledon on  July 4.

WIMBLEDON, England — Sloane Stephens has always been a player who takes defeats hard, but at Wimbledon on Tuesday the American could hardly be angry about losing.

When Stephens, 24, stepped out onto Court 14 it was to play her first official match in 11 months. Unfortunately, she was pitted against fellow American Alison Riske, a natural competitor on grass courts, who scored a 6-2, 7-5 win.

“It was tiring,” Stephens said. “I was glad I was able to get out there and play some good tennis at times. It was good. It was nice.

“I had no expectations,” she added. “Just go out there and play as well as I could. Obviously, it's a big ask to play Ali in the first round; her best surface is grass. I did the best I could. I'm pleased with — I mean, obviously not that I didn't win, but that I was able to get out there and I was pain-free.”

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The last time Stephens ventured on a court to play a tournament was at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro last August — she lost her opening match to Genie Bouchard of Canada.

A foot injury, which took awhile to identify the actual problem, kept her sidelined since Rio, although she actually prepared to play at the beginning of this year. She made the long journey to Sydney, Australia, in January, thinking she was ready to get back on court only to finally discover she had a stress fracture and cyst, which required surgery.

Forced by injury to spend time away from the game, Stephens experienced a rare opportunity to live outside of the tennis cocoon most players tend to function within.

“There is always other things going on in the world, but I missed tennis and I missed seeing my friends,” she said. “I mean, my life is tennis. I travel every week.

“It was just different being home, but I had a great time. I got to spend time with family and things I normally wouldn't be able to do. Holidays I missed, birthdays I had missed. My cousin's soccer games, things like that. I was able to be present for the first time in a long time. That was nice.”

Although she wasn’t on court, Stephens wasn’t totally removed from tennis during her rehabilitation.

She switched gears to handle a number of on-air talent assignments for the Tennis Channel. While she’s not ready to hang up her tennis racket to pick up a microphone, she did enjoy the TV experience.

“It was really fun,” she said. “Like I said, I had nothing to do, and it was a great opportunity to stay involved in tennis and actually, like, see people I enjoy, like Paul Annacone and Lindsay Davenport, Tracy Austin. I got to wake up and hang out with them for like a month straight.”

Stephens was once considered the future “it” girl of American tennis when in 2013 she posted a surprising Australian Open semifinal finish. She did well enough to eventually rise to a career-high No. 11 in the rankings.

But as often happens, the attention and pressure took its toll. She started to have mixed results and often seemed unable to cope with not always being in winning mode.

By the beginning of 2016, Stephens was starting to find her form again. She would win three titles — Auckland, Acapulco and Charleston — and the buzz was she was back and starting to look like the player many projected she would become.

Unfortunately, life takes different turns and that’s when the foot injury developed, which now finds her technically ranked No. 336 and playing here on a protected ranking. Older and wiser, she is taking a much more conservative approach to her tennis.

Asked when she’ll be back to normal footing on a tennis court, she replied, “Who knows? I wish I could tell you, but, I guess it's a matter of playing and just trying to work your way back into it in match situations and a lot of tennis.”