Tennis-Wimbledon ends in tears for injured Serena
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[June 30, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) -Tennis great Serena
Williams limped out of Wimbledon in tears on Tuesday after her
latest bid for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam singles crown
ended in injury.
The American sixth seed and seven-times Wimbledon winner was clearly
in pain on a slippery Centre Court and sought treatment while 3-2 up
in her first round match against unseeded Belarusian Aliaksandra
Sasnovich.
Williams returned after a lengthy break but the distress was
evident.
She grimaced and wiped away tears before preparing to serve at 3-3
after Sasnovich had pulled back from 3-1 down.
The 39-year-old, who had started the match with strapping on her
right thigh, then let out a shriek and sank kneeling to the grass
sobbing, before being helped off the court.
"I was heartbroken to have to withdraw today after injuring my right
leg," Williams wrote on Instagram.
"My love and gratitude are with the fans and the team who make being
on centre court so meaningful. Feeling the extraordinary warmth and
support of the crowd today when I walked on - and off - the court
meant the world to me."
GREAT CHAMPION
Sasnovich, who practised her serve while Williams was getting
treatment, commiserated with an opponent who had never gone out in
the first round at Wimbledon in her previous 19 visits.
"I'm so sad for Serena, she's a great champion," said the world
number 100. "It happens sometimes."
Eight-times men's singles champion Roger Federer expressed shock at
Williams' departure and voiced concern about the surface, with the
roof closed on Centre Court on a rainy afternoon.
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All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, Britain - June 29,
2021 Serena Williams of the U.S. reacts after sustaining an injury
before retiring from her first round match against Belarus'
Aliaksandra Sasnovich REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
His first-round opponent Adrian
Mannarino of France also retired with a knee injury after a slip in
the match immediately before Williams'.
"I do feel it feels a tad more slippery maybe under the roof. I
don't know if it's just a gut feeling. You do have to move very,
very carefully out there. If you push too hard in the wrong moments,
you do go down," Federer said.
"I feel for a lot of players, it's super key to get through those
first two rounds because the grass is more slippery, it is more
soft. As the tournament progresses, usually it gets harder and
easier to move on."
Williams has been a Wimbledon finalist in her last four appearances
but her bid to equal Margaret Court's record 24 Grand Slam singles
titles has stalled since her last in Australia in 2017.
With the absence this year of world number two Naomi Osaka and
third-ranked Simona Halep, hopes were rising of another year to
remember for the American.
"It was hard for me to watch that," said compatriot Coco Gauff.
"She's the reason why I started to play tennis. It's hard to watch
any player get injured, but especially her."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, Additional reporting by Rory Carroll;
editing by Ed Osmond/Toby Davis/Ken Ferris)
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