LONDON — Jubilation from ecstatic Britons started rolling in the moment Emma Raducanu dropped her racket in victory after beating Canada’s Leylah Fernandez at the U.S. Open over the weekend.

Queen Elizabeth II, fellow sports stars and politicians joined the chorus of congratulations when Raducanu, 18, on Saturday became the first British woman to woman to win the U.S. Open since 1968.

Her fairytale story has already been repeated countless times.

Britain’s Emma Raducanu, seen here celebrating after winning the U.S. Open, points to her diverse background on social media, where her bio simply reads “london | toronto | bucharest | shenyang.”Timothy A. Clary / AFP – Getty Images

How, in a matter of months, she went from graduating high school, where she won top grades, to becoming the first qualifier to reach a Grand Slam final in the professional era. And how she was born in Toronto, Canada, to a Romanian father and a Chinese mother, moved to the U.K. at the age of 2 and started playing tennis when she was 5.

But it hasn’t been a total love in, and her win has highlighted the complicated relationship that Britain has with diversity and immigration. Raducanu herself points to her global upbringing and background on Twitter and Instagram, where her bio doesn’t mention tennis and instead reads “london | toronto | bucharest | shenyang.”

London Mayor Sadiq Khan quickly tweeted after her win that Raducanu’s “story is London’s story.”

“We embrace and celebrate our diversity. And if you work hard, and get a helping hand, you can achieve anything,” he wrote on the social media platform.

London is the most diverse city in the U.K. as well as one of the most diverse in Europe. White British people made up just 44.9 percent of the city’s population, according to government figures from the last census in 2011, compared to more than 93 percent of the population in England’s North East.

The adulation came from all corners of the political spectrum.

Right wing and anti-immigrant politician Nigel Farage was quickly criticized after he tweeted that she was a “global megastar” and said her win was “truly incredible.” Farage has made a career warning about immigrants, particularly those from Romania, coming to the U.K.

Download the NBC News app for breaking news and politics

Before the U.K.’s departure from the European Union and shortly before a change in the rules allowed Bulgarian and Romanian citizens to live and work in Britain, a YouGov poll showed that the British were more concerned than their French or German counterparts about an influx of immigrants.

It’s a sentiment that Jonathan Eyal, international director at British defense and security think tank the Royal United Services Institute, mocked in a post on Twitter after Raducanu’s win.

“All these Romanian and Chinese migrants coming over here, taking our jobs,” he tweeted.

British diversity often runs up against discrimination and racist abuse in real life and on social media.

More recently, after the Euro final in July, three Black players who missed their penalty kicks were subjected to a torrent of racist abuse on social media. That then led to an outpouring of support for the players on social media and in real life.

Raducanu’s background has some immigrants to Britain, like Cambridge City Councillor Alexandra Bulat, not only celebrating her success, but also cautioning others that they shouldn’t get too hung up on it.

“People of migrant background do not need massive success stories to be able to be accepted and have rights in the U.K.,” said Bulat, who moved from Romania to the U.K. nine years ago, in an email to NBC News. “Being British is, for many people, a multicultural, multiethnic identity. There is more to Emma and every one of us than our ethnic heritage.”

For her part, Raducanu embraces both her British nationality and her international background. After her win, she posted a photo of her holding both her trophy as well as a British flag. And in interviews she often speaks about her parents and the countries where they were born.

In the past, she has cited Chinese tennis star Li Na as well as Romanian player Simona Halep as inspirations to her own game, and after the tennis final she addressed fans in Mandarin in a short video posted on the U.S. Open’s official account on Weibo, a popular social media platform in China.

Britain wasn’t the only place where people rushed to claim the tennis star as their own. In China, the hashtag “18-year-old ethnic Chinese young player wins U.S. Open championship” was viewed 200 million times on platform Weibo, and social media users said they were proud of Raducanu because of her Chinese heritage.

Jennifer Jett contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

Champagne in Dixie Cups. Pancakes Flecked With Gold. Fine Dining Gets Fun Again.

THE OLD Pineapple & Pearls was, by any measure, a resounding success.…

ABC’s reboot of ‘The Wonder Years’ recaptures the dramedy’s magic — and adds its own

In 1988, 29 million households watched the ABC premiere of “The Wonder…

Kellogg Posts Higher Profit as Pricing Fights Growing Inflation

Kellogg Co. said higher prices helped it maintain its profit outlook for…

Conagra to Sell Peter Pan Peanut Butter Brand to Post Holdings

Conagra Brands Inc. is selling its Peter Pan peanut butter line to…