Raducanu retires in Rome as back injury persists, Jabeur survives early
scare
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[May 11, 2022] (Reuters)
-Briton Emma Raducanu was unable to
overcome a back injury which forced her to retire from her first
round match against Bianca Andreescu at the Italian Open on Tuesday.
Raducanu, who had also struggled with a back injury during her
previous tournament in Madrid and a hip injury earlier this year,
was trailing 6-2 2-1 when she called it quits.
"Definitely disappointed with how today went. But I guess I wanted
to give it a try. I never really knew how bad it was until I kind of
went out there," Raducanu told reporters.
"I'm still learning when it's right to push my body and push through
it, and when it's not. I guess that's something I'm learning at
these tournaments.
"After Madrid I thought that maybe taking one, two days off, it
would just go away because a lot of the other small niggles I've
had, they've kind of gone away after taking two days off."
The battle of the reigning and former U.S. Open champions on clay
looked an intriguing prospect but Raducanu struggled from the outset
and served poorly, handing Andreescu a number of break points.
Raducanu was clutching her back when she took a medical timeout
after going 5-2 down but returned to the court minutes later where
the Canadian held to love to take the opening set.
The 19-year-old Raducanu held serve at the start of the second set
but looked uncomfortable yet again and this time she took the
decision to retire when she was down 2-1 in the second.
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Britain's Emma Raducanu in action during her first round match
against Canada's Bianca Andreescu REUTERS/Alberto Lingria
Raducanu, who played on clay professionally for the
first time last month, said she did not want to make a hasty
decision to skip the French Open and focus on the grasscourt swing
and her home Grand Slam at Wimbledon.
"Obviously I would not want to miss the French Open. The whole clay
season leads up to it," she said.
"I think the last few weeks have been really positive. I've learnt a
lot about myself and my game has definitely improved on this
surface."
Tunisian Ons Jabeur, who became the first African player to win a
WTA 1000 title in Madrid over the weekend, survived a second set
wobble to dispatch Romania's Sorana Cirstea 6-0 7-6(1).
Jabeur looked set for a comfortable victory when she bagelled
Cirstea and was 5-2 up in the second with 45 minutes played.
However, Cirstea fought back valiantly as Jabeur lost her focus and
made a slew of errors, forcing a tiebreak where the Tunisian
eventually prevailed to win her seventh consecutive match for the
first time in her career.
(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru; editing by Pritha Sarkar and
Toby Davis)
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