Eugenie Bouchard loses to 4th seed Radwanska

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It was only two years ago that Eugenie Bouchard made her arrival on the big stage at the Australian Open, reaching her first Grand Slam semifinal and talking confidently about how she always expected to be one of the game’s stars.

Since then, the young Canadian has had a meteoric rise to the top of the rankings, followed by a dramatic decline and freak head injury all by the age of 21.

Back in Rod Laver Arena on Wednesday, the Westmount, Que., native showed flashes of the game that took her to the Wimbledon final in 2014 but also plenty of rust  as she lost in the second round to fourth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska 6-4, 6-2.

“I felt at times my level was high, but it’s just about having that consistency throughout the whole match,” a downcast Bouchard said afterward.

Consistency is what’s been lacking for the Canadian since midway through her breakout season in 2014. After reaching the semifinals at the Australian Open and French Open and then the Wimbledon final surging to the top 5 in the rankings Bouchard began a downward slide that hasn’t really stopped.

Her troubles began shortly after losing the title match to Petra Kvitova at the All England Club. She went 9-10 the rest of 2014 and parted ways with longtime coach Nick Saviano.

Then came a tumultuous 2015 season in which she won only three matches from March to August and split with another coach, Sam Sumyk. She seemed to turn a corner by stringing together three wins at the U.S. Open, but slipped in the locker room and slammed her head on the floor, causing a concussion and forcing her to withdraw. She later filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Tennis Association.

Bouchard had 25 winners nearly three times as many as Radwanska but also 37 unforced errors.

“Against a great player like her, you can’t ever back off or give her a chance to breathe,” she said. “I have to remember that’s how it goes in tennis.”

It’s now been nearly a year and a half since Bouchard’s last top-20 win, but she’s no longer expecting to an immediate return to the top. “I’ve missed out, I feel, so much so I kind of almost want to play catch-up in terms of matches,” she said. “No matter what happens, if I lose every match, I’m happy to be doing what I love.”