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."
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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
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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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