

Daria Kasatkina says she “didn’t have much choice” but to defect from her home country of Russia following her decision to become a permanent resident of Australia.
Kasatkina, 27, came out publicly in 2022 and said her decision to represent Australia was necessary if she wanted to “be myself”.
Speaking about her switch to representing Australia for the first time, Kasatkina, the world No. 12, said in a news conference at the Charleston Open: “It’s emotional for me.”
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“For me, being openly gay, if I want to be myself, I have to make this step, and I did it.”
Kasatkina came out publicly in a 2022 interview with Russian blogger Vitya Kravchenko in Barcelona that was published on YouTube.
”Living in the closet is the hardest thing. It’s impossible,“ she said in the interview.
Asked whether two women would ever be able to walk down the street holding hands in Russia, Kasatkina said: “Never.”
During the same series of interviews, Kasatkina criticized her former nation’s invasion of Ukraine.
She described the war as a ”full-blown nightmare,“ and said that the end of it was what she wanted most. Asked whether she would be worried for her safety if she decided to return home, Kasatkina replied: ”Yes, I have thought about that.“
On Monday in South Carolina, Kasatkina said it would be strange hearing herself being introduced as from Australia. Russian and Belarusian tennis players have not competed under their flags since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in early 2022. “For a couple of years, I didn’t hear anything,” she said.
In her statement March 29 announcing her decision, Kasatkina said: “Australia is a place I love, is incredibly welcoming and a place where I feel totally at home.
“I love being in Melbourne and look forward to making my home there.”
In her Charleston press conference, she began by saying “mate” to the assembled reporters, a favourite Australian colloquialism.
Kasatkina, who has been ranked as high as No. 8 in the world and is a former French Open semifinalist, will play her first match under the Australian flag on Wednesday against either Lauren Davis or Jamie Loeb.
She is hoping to go one better than last year in Charleston, when she was beaten by American Danielle Collins in the final. Kasatkina won her first WTA Tour title at the event eight years ago, when she was 19.
(Yuichi Yamazaki/AFP via Getty Images)
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