Today's Edition

IN THIS EDITION:

 • Kathryn Louise Slussar

 • Lisa Jo Ervin

 • Greenbrier County Broadband Committee to Hold Rally for Rural Broadband Access

 • West Virginia Expands Prizes Of Lottery For Vaccinated

 • City Of Ronceverte Meeting Agendas

 • Sponsors hail Naomi Osaka's 'courage' on mental health

 • English Country Dance is Alive and Revived

 • Music Review: Mary Hott Brings Wrongs To Light Regarding W.Va. Mine Wars

 • Monroe County Health Department To Give COVID Vaccination During Farmer's Day

 • Farmer's Day Horse Show To Host Food By Reining Warriors

 • Celebration Of Life To Be Held In Honor Of Carol Marie Dean

 • Greenbrier County Courthouse News May 28 – June 3

 • Duke's Krzyzewski to coach 1 final year, hand off to Scheyer

 • Smoot Man Arrested After Setting Fire To Camper

 • White Sulphur Springs Public Library To Host Batman

 • Osaka Steps Out Of French Open And Onto Sport's Third Rail

 • West Virginia Coal Miner Dies In Underground Accident

 • West Virginia governor sues bank in latest twist for his biz

 • Ohio-based electronics recycler opens in West Virginia

 • WVa state art exhibition submissions being accepted

 • US jobless claims drop to 385,000, another pandemic low

 • June 3 Husband Reveals a Frighteningly Short Fuse

In The News:

Sponsors hail Naomi Osaka's 'courage' on mental health

By MAE ANDERSON and ANNE D’INNOCENZIO AP Business Writers
NEW YORK (AP) — A few years ago, a star athlete dropping out of a major tennis tournament over mental health issues might have been seen as a sign of weakness.
Today, at least for Naomi Osaka’s corporate sponsors, it is being hailed as refreshingly honest.
That would explain why so many of them have stuck by Osaka after the four-time Grand Slam champion announced Monday that she was withdrawing from the French Open because she didn’t want to appear for the requisite news conferences that caused her “huge waves of anxiety.”
Osaka, who also acknowledged suffering “long bouts of depression,” received criticism by some who say the media events are just ” part of the job. ” But Nike, Sweetgreen and other sponsors put out statements in support of the 23-year-old star after she revealed her struggles.
“Our thoughts are with Naomi,” Nike said in a statement. “We support her and recognize her courage in sharing her own mental health experience.” Sweetgreen tweeted that its partnership with Osaka “is rooted in wellness in all its forms.” And Mastercard tweeted: “Naomi Osaka’s decision reminds us all how important it is to prioritize personal health and well-being.”
Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce, said that Osaka’s disclosure has made her a more authentic spokesperson — and more valuable to corporate sponsors.
Osaka, who was born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Haitian father, moved to the United States with her family when she was 3, and now lives in Los Angeles.
She has taken a leading role in protesting the deaths last year of George Floyd and other Black people who died at the hands of the police, wearing a mask with a different victim’s name on each match day at the 2020 U.S. Open. She was named the 2020 AP Female Athlete of the Year.
According to Forbes, Osaka is the world’s highest-paid woman athlete, earning $37 million in 2020 from blue-chip sponsors such as Tag Heuer, AirBnB, and Louis Vuitton in addition to Mastercard and Nike.
Nike has stood by sports stars after other controversies, including Tiger Woods after his 2009 sex scandal and former 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick after he knelt during games to protest police brutality against Black people. But it recently dropped Brazilian soccer star Neymar after he refused to cooperate with an internal investigation into sexual assault allegations from a Nike staffer.
Osaka’s disclosure comes as celebrities and other public figures openly address their own issues with depression and anxiety. Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, shared their experiences in a televised interview with Oprah Winfrey and have since teamed with her to create a mental health focused series called “The Me You Can’t See,” in which Prince Harry talks about working through anxiety and grief.
Osaka also joins a growing list of top-tier athletes speaking out about mental health. Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps, NBA players Kevin Love and DeMar DeRozan, and the WNBA’s A’ja Wilson have all spoken very publicly about their bouts with depression, sharing both the successes and setbacks.
The four Grand Slam tournaments reacted to Osaka’s withdrawal by pledging to do more to address players’ mental health issues. The episode also could serve as a tipping point for the professional tennis tours — and leagues in other sports — to safeguard athletes’ mental, and not just physical, health, said Windy Dees, professor of sport administration at the University of Miami.
“It’s absolutely a growth opportunity for the (Women’s Tennis Association) and all leagues, there’s a lot of work to be done,” Dees said.

——
AP Sports Writer Howard Fendrich in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Related

Next Post

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

west virginia daily newstaxi how muchupdown