Carreno Busta accuses Djokovic of feigning injury concerns
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[October 08, 2020]
PARIS (Reuters) - Spaniard Pablo
Carreno Busta accused Novak Djokovic of gamesmanship during their
French Open quarter-final on Wednesday as he felt the world number
one Serb did not have any genuine health issues despite appearing to
battle injury problems.
Djokovic, 33, had his neck taped during the match on Court Philippe
Chatrier and his movements seemed somewhat restricted during the
opening set against the world number 18.
He also called the trainer on court to work on some issue with his
upper left arm.
But the top seed recovered well to advance to the semi-finals with a
4-6 6-2 6-3 6-4 victory and later said he had to deal with some
physical issues during the early part of his match, without
providing much details.
"Each time he is in trouble he usually does it, that means to say
that he was in trouble, that he wasn't comfortable and that I was
playing at a high level and was causing him to doubt himself,"
Carreno Busta told reporters in Spanish.
"Every time a match gets complicated he asks for medical assistance.
He has been doing this for a long time. I already knew that. I knew
it would happen at the U.S. Open, I knew it would happen here and I
know it will keep on happening.
"I don't know if it's something chronic in his shoulder or just
mental, but he didn't put me off."
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It was against the same player that Djokovic was defaulted a month
back in the fourth round of the U.S. Open for inadvertently hitting
a line judge with the ball.
Djokovic, who is chasing an 18th major, looked stiff on Wednesday
and banged his racket against his thigh in frustration as Carreno
Busta took the opening set, the first that the Serb lost at this
year's claycourt Grand Slam.
"I don't know, maybe it's the pressure or something that he needs to
do it. But he continues playing normal, no? I don't know if he's
(in) pain really or he has mental (issues). Ask him," Carreno Busta
said in English.
(Reporting by Richard Martin in London and Sudipto Ganguly in
Mumbai; editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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