American tennis player Sloane Stephens has become the latest prominent athlete to share the personal burden of what she said were the relentless and “exhausting” attacks she receives on social media.
This is utterly unacceptable. I’m grateful to @SloaneStephens for choosing to talk about this. It should not be her burden alone to carry. 3 Black soccer players on the British Natl Team endured hideous online abuse after the team’s loss this summer. It’s time for change. https://t.co/mmdqqw99cU
— Sherrilyn Ifill (@Sifill_LDF) September 5, 2021
US tennis star Sloane Stephens shares abusive social media posts
“I am human,” Stephens said on Instagram a day after being inundated by more than 2,000 “messages of abuse/anger” following a third-round loss to Germany’s Angelique Kerber at the US Open.
“It’s so hard to read messages like these, but I’ll post a few so you guys can see what it’s like,” said Stephens, who voiced her concerns just as a number of other Black female athletes have also recently spoken out about the mental health toll high-pressure sports can take.
One of the abusive messages read: “I promise to find you and destroy your leg so hard that you can’t walk anymore @sloanestephens!… I hope you enjoyed your last moments on court today.”
Stephens, who won the US Open in 2017 and once ranked No. 3 in the world, commented: “This type of hate is so exhausting and never-ending. This isn’t talked about enough, but it freaking sucks.”
Her comments came in the wake of intense attention to four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka, who withdrew from the French Open and skipped Wimbledon this year over mental health issues she said were exacerbated by the harsh light of media attention.
Osaka’s case increased public awareness of the mental-health challenges facing professional athletes, particularly women and athletes of color.
Osaka, after suffering a stunning upset loss at the US Open on Friday to Canadian teen Leylah Fernandez, said she was taking an indefinite break from tennis.
Former junior world champion Taylor Townsend, who is African American, said in a video on CNN that she had also received harassing social-media messages, calling her “a piece of s—“ and criticizing her for “my body image, my race, my skin color.”
Stephens, for her part, said she also received many positive messages, for which she was thankful.
“I’m happy to have people in my corner who support me,” she told CNN. “I’m choosing positive vibes over negatives ones… but it’s not always smiles and roses.”
On Sunday she wrote on Instagram that she hopes “this conversation continues” while thanking fans for their “kind and thoughtful messages.”
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