Keys undone by debilitating nerves in shock US Open defeat

Madison Keys said the nerves she experienced in her first US Open appearance as a Grand Slam winner proved "paralysing" after the sixth-seeded American was sent spinning out of the opening round in New York on Monday.
Keys notched up a staggering 89 unforced errors and made 14 double faults in her 6-7(10) 7-6(3) 7-5 defeat by Mexican Renata Zarazua in front of stunned spectators on Arthur Ashe Stadium to become the highest seeded casualty of the women's draw so far.
It was a bitterly disappointing finish to a Grand Slam season that began with her maiden major title at the Australian Open in January and the 30-year-old said the jitters cost her dearly against her unseeded opponent.
"I feel like today ... for the first time in a while, my nerves really got the better of me, and it became a little bit paralysing," Keys told reporters.
"I felt like I was just slow, I wasn't seeing things the way that I wanted to which I feel resulted in a lot of bad decisions and lazy footwork.
"So I feel like that's the summary."
Three years ago, Keys spoke openly about the "dark pit of despair" that she was in when her career had stalled due to the suffocating pressure of trying to stay at the top level of the sport and she said expectations weighed heavily on her again.
"I think it was probably building a little bit," she added.
"You always feel first-round jitters and as the day gets closer, feel a little bit more and more nervous.
"But I feel for whatever reason today I couldn't separate myself from the ... feeling that winning matters just way too much ... Once you start playing badly it just all snowballs."
The 2017 US Open runner-up suggested that the gruelling season had also taken a heavy toll.
"As the year has gone on and on and on, there's been a lot of matches, there hasn't been a lot of time to reset and have training blocks and have time where you're not competing, to get back to life and (find) the real balance of it all," she said.
"It was a lot easier at the beginning of the year, because ... everything is fresh. Now I feel there's been moments where you've been on the road longer, played a lot of matches, you haven't had a lot of days off.
"Those are the days where things are just a little bit harder. I think those are the times when your bad habits rear their head."
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