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Regular-article-logo Monday, 06 May 2024

Bad timing and bad luck: Serena

The three-time champion said her left Achilles’ tendon had not sufficiently healed

Karen Crouse Paris Published 01.10.20, 01:54 AM
Serena Williams

Serena Williams Source: twitter.com/serenawilliams

Serena Williams, the three-time champion, pulled out of the French Open on Wednesday with an injury shortly before she was scheduled to play a second-round match, and then suggested the issue might keep her from playing another competitive match this year.

Serena, 39, who is one Grand Slam tournament victory shy of equalling Margaret Court’s record of 24 major singles titles, said her left Achilles’ tendon, which required treatment during her US Open semi-final loss to Victoria Azarenka and kept her out of a clay-court tune-up event in Rome, had not sufficiently healed.

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After warming up Wednesday morning for her second-round match against Tsvetana Pironkova on Philippe Chatrier Court, Serena said she consulted with her coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, and they mutually agreed that it was unwise for her to continue. So at the time when she normally would have been stretching for her match on the main show court, she made her way to the interview room for a virtual news conference.

“I really wanted to give an effort here,” Serena said, adding: “But just looking long-term in this tournament, will I be able to get through enough matches? For me, I don’t think I could.”

The quick turnaround from the US Open in New York earlier this month has been an issue for several top players. The French Open was moved from its usual dates in May and June because of high rates of coronavirus infection in France.

The shift left only 13 days between the end of the US Open and the start of the French, which left those who advanced to the later rounds in New York little time to recover.

The Open’s women’s champion, Naomi Osaka, withdrew from the French Open two weeks ago citing a lingering hamstring injury. Of the four men and four women who reached the semi-finals in singles in New York, only Azarenka and the Spanish men’s player Pablo Carreño Busta chose to play in the Italian Open in Rome.

Within hours of Serena’s exit, though, Azarenka was out as well, beaten by Anna Karolina Schmiedlova, 6-2, 6-2.

While Azarenka has pressed right back into action in Rome after her loss to Osaka, the transition from hard courts to clay is not straightforward for many players, since it requires different tactics and footwork, including frequent sliding.

For a player carrying an injury, the switch is often even more difficult.Serena said her Achilles’ tendon was bothering her Monday during her first-round match, a 7-6 (2), 6-0 victory against Kristie Ahn.

She said the challenge provided by Ahn was compounded by her struggles to conceal the pain she was feeling.

“I had to focus on walking straight so I wasn’t limping,” Serena said.

She added: “I think Achilles is an injury that you don’t want to play with because if it gets worse, it’s one of the worst injuries. I don’t want it to get to the point where it can’t get better.”

“If it was my knee it would be really more devastating for me,” she said.

“This is something that just happened.

“I feel like my body is actually doing really, really well,” Serena added.

“I just ran into, for lack of a better word, bad timing and bad luck, really, in New York. It happened, but my body is actually doing really, really well.”

Serena said she had been advised by her doctors to take at least two weeks of complete rest.

“I think I need four to six weeks of sitting and doing nothing,” she said, signalling the potential end to her 2020 season, which was already shortened by five months because of the coronavirus pandemic.

“I don’t know if I’ll be able to play another tournament this year,” said Serena, who sounded upbeat, all things considered.

(Christopher Clarey contributed reporting)

New York Times News Service

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