Naomi Osaka was born on October 16, 1997, in Osaka, Japan, to Leonard François, a Haitian-American, and Tamaki Osaka, a Japanese woman. Her parents moved the family to New York when she was three, then to Florida, where Leonard, inspired by the Williams sisters' father Richard, began coaching Naomi and her older sister Mari on public courts. Naomi was never enrolled in conventional school; instead she trained full-time from a young age, absorbing the competitive tennis environment of Florida while maintaining her Japanese identity in the home. She turned professional in 2013 at age fifteen.
Osaka's breakthrough came at the 2018 US Open, where she defeated Serena Williams in a final marked by controversy — Williams received code violations that led to emotional arguments with the umpire, and Osaka was visibly distressed to receive her first Grand Slam title under such circumstances, breaking down in tears at the trophy ceremony. Her subsequent slam victories — the 2019 Australian Open, the 2020 US Open, the 2021 Australian Open — established her as the defining player of the post-Williams generation: powerful, technically complete, and capable of performing at her best in the highest-pressure situations.
Osaka's decision to withdraw from the 2021 French Open after refusing to participate in mandatory press conferences — citing the mental health toll of exposure to negative media — was one of the most discussed sports stories of the year. Her public statement about her experience of anxiety and depression, following the withdrawal, changed the conversation around athlete mental health in professional sports. She subsequently took a mental health break from tennis, becoming the most prominent athlete to publicly prioritize psychological wellbeing over competition.
Osaka's cultural presence — as a biracial Japanese-American woman navigating dual national identities while competing at the highest level, as an athlete who challenged the structural expectations of professional sport regarding media availability, and as a figure who demonstrated that psychological honesty is compatible with elite performance — has made her one of the most significant figures in professional sports beyond her tennis achievements. She lit the Olympic cauldron at the Tokyo 2020 Games, the first Japanese-American to do so in a Japanese Olympiad.