When Naomi Osaka, the young2 Japanese tennis sensation, stepped on to the court for her first match at the US Open in 2020, there was a gasp from the crowd: the words ‘Breonna Taylor’ were embossed in stark white on the black mask she wore, for this was when the pandemic was still raging. Taylor was the 26-year-old Black medical technician who had been shot dead by one of the posse of plainclothes police officers who had barged into her home in Louisville, Kentucky and opened fire. Osaka was paying tribute to a victim of racial violence. By doing so, she was breaking the rules of the game, according to those who believe that sports and politics should not mix. The ‘Black Lives Matter’ (BLM) movement had peaked that summer after the murder of George Floyd, leaving the US a nation deeply divided. Osaka was aware that she had ruffled several feathers by bringing her activism to the tennis court. Many were shocked that a ‘slip of a girl like Osaka’ was getting into social issues when she could make better use of her time focusing on her game instead.