ATP
Rafa readies for retirement
THEY are dropping like flies – an olde English saying – but one very appropriate to the 2023 Slam summer swing.
On Thursday 22-time Major winner Rafael Nadal, undoubtably one of the greatest, announced he would not be competing at Roland Garros, his favourite Major.
It will be the first time since 2004 Nadal has not played Paris, but a hip injury that has dogged him for four months has seen to that.
Nadal injured his left hip at the Australian Open second round in January and has missed eight tournaments since.
The drama unfolded at his training camp in Mallorca on Wednesday when the injury beer thought he had under control flared up again.
The Spanish legend had to wrap his session up early as Carlos Moya and Marc Lopez looked on.
His doctors subsequently confirmed Paris was a no-go.
In the press conference held at his academy on Thursday, Nadal discussed his plans for the future, including bringing down his career in 2024.
And Nadal, quite rightly, doesn’t want to retire in a press conference. He wants to be at every major at least once more.
“I don’t like the word but I feel strong enough to say it: I don’t think I deserve to end like this. I’ve worked hard enough throughout my career for my end not to be in a press conference,” he said.
“After that you never know what can happen.”
A party perhaps? No, way, said the Spaniard.
“I’m going to try to compete at the highest level.”
The party can come later.

Photo: Roger Parker International Sports Fotos Ltd
MEANWHILE, on the other aside of the planet, another drawcard player gave his reasons for not playing at Roland Garros.
Not that Roland Garros is a favoured venue. Nick Kyrgios is not a fan of clay.
But the Aussie revealed he had sustained a cut to his foot when a man allegedly stole his car at gunpoint.
Many fans thought his non-appearance was due to his knee injury and subsequent surgery, bit no… his agent told The Canberra Times the knee was “fine” and a nasty cut to the foot was why he would not be in Paris.

“The knee surgery went as well as it possibly could and his rehabilitation was fantastic and we were at the point where we were doing on-court loading and management,” Daniel Horsfall told the newspaper.
“We needed to be at a point that he could comfortably play five sets. Right when we were getting stuck into the loading period, the (alleged) armed robbery happened at his house.
“During the ordeal he cut his foot quite badly. It’s not healing correctly and he can’t put in the work on court, so he’s been off court for almost two weeks now.”
A man had allegedly pointed a gun at Kyrgios’s mother before stealing his lime-green Tesla near his home in Canberra.
Kyrgios called police and using an app on his phone helped them track his car’s location.
AND Novak Djokovic doesn’t escape scrutiny either.
Djokovic, who recently stated his disappointment with the media over the way he was treated for his refusal to be vaccinated against Covid, could be knocked off second spot on the ATP rankings after an equally disappointing Rome tournament.
The Serb said the “shift of generations” had finally arrived after this loss to 20-year-old Dane Holger Rune in the Italian Open quarter-finals.
“A new generation is here already,” Djokovic told reporters.
“Alcaraz is No. 1 in the world from Monday, obviously he’s playing amazing tennis. I think it’s also good for our sport that we have new faces, new guys coming up.
“We’ve been saying this for years that we can expect that moment to come when you have a kind of shift of generations.

“I’m personally still trying to hang in there with all of them. I still have the hunger to keep going. Let’s see how far I’m going to play.”
And that Covid refusal?
Well, Djokovic is still playing the victim, saying in an interview with Corriere Della Serra, 95 per cent of the media stories about him were false.
“I suffered everything on my skin. Many people have appreciated that I have remained consistent. 95 per cent of what has been written and said on TV about me in the last three years is totally false,” he said.
“I’m not no vax and I’ve never said I was in my life. I’m not even pro vax. I am pro choice. I defend freedom of choice.”

Photo: Roger Parker International Sports Fotos Ltd
AND another draw card, two-time defending champion Iga Swiatek, will go to Paris struggling to overcome a thigh injury.
Swiatek retired in the third set of her quarter final against Elena Rybakina in Rome because of a right thigh injury.

SHE said what?
The semifinal clash in Rome between Elena Rybakina and Jelena Ostapenko ended in some heated words last week as the pair met at the net following Rybakina’s win.
Ostapenko, never backward in coming forward with her thoughts, as Rybakina’s coach Stefano Vukov said he heard Ostapenko call his player a ‘bitch’.
“She told her you’re a bitch in front of me,” Vukov said.

FORMER world No. 1 Simona Halep isn’t happy after being charged with a second doping offence over what has been called “irregularities” in her athlete biological passport.
Halep has hit out at authorities claiming she is the victim of harassment from the International Tennis Integrity Agency.
Halep has refuted the extra charges after the ITIA issued a second set of charges after they allegedly detected an abnormal evolution in her blood.
Halep has since said she has had her blood samples analysed by independent experts who disagree with the ITIA findings.
“Since October 7, when I got charged by the ITIA for a suspicion of doping, I have lived the worst nightmare I have ever gone through in my life,” Halep said in a statement published to her social media accounts.
“Not only has my name been soiled in the worst possible way, but I am facing a constant determination from the ITIA for a reason that I cannot understand, to prove my guilt while I haven’t EVER even thought of taking any illicit substance.
“I tried two times to have the opportunity to be judged by an Independent Tribunal and the ITIA has constantly found reasons to postpone.
“Now that we have clearly established that I have been victim of a contamination, they came up with a so-called not normal evolution of my blood. Three world renowned experts that have studied my blood tests have been extremely clear that my blood is totally normal.”

EMMA Raducanu’s former coach Andrew Richardson has revealed how he was dumped by the Brit’s agent after she had won the US Open in 2021.
Richardson said last week he wanted to negotiate a long-term deal, but received “ga brief call” from her agent and that was the end of their partnership.
Raducanu has since had four different coaches and has been criticised over her constant coaching changes.
“The fact of the matter is that I had a nine-week trial contract that both Emma and I thought was a good idea to see how we would get on, and it ran through to the end of the US Open, stopping immediately afterwards,” Richardson said.
“There was a period of time after that when I was keen to re-negotiate the contract. I wanted to carry on, and I had a plan that I wanted to put in place for Emma. This thing about ‘I wanted to go off and coach my son’ is not true, but it seems to come up all the time.
“After probably 10 days to two weeks after the US Open, I didn’t have a contract. We were in the process of re-negotiating, and then I got a brief call from her agent telling me they were going to go in a different direction.”
AND finally ….
There was no handshake between Anhelina Kalinina and Veronika Kudermetova at the Rome Open with the ongoing Russia – Ukraine war the reason.
Ukrainian Kalinina, who is currently housing her family in her own apartment after their house was bombed and destroyed, responded that it was nothing personal:
“The girl is from Russia. It’s no secret why I didn’t shake, because this country is actually attacking Ukraine. Yes, this is sport. But it’s also a politician thing. So it’s nothing personal. But in general, this isn’t acceptable,” she said.
ATP
Ruud survives a scare to secure Gstaad quarters
Two-time champion Casper Ruud had to work for more than two and a half hours to overcome Jaime Faria, the Portuguese who put out Stan Wawrinka in the first round at the Gstaad Swiss Open on Thursday.
Faria was riding the momentum from Tuesday’s defeat of three-time Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka, set to retire this season and beaten in an opening match at his home venue.
Faria had his eye on a second upset as he faced Ruud, who lifted the trophy at this elite alpine village in 2021 and 2022.
Ruud ahd to dodge a bullet and mount a comeback to get through the second-round test against the Portuguese.
After dropping the opening set in a tiebreaker, Ruud played patiently as Faria saved five break points in the sixth game of the second set before failing on the sixth.
Ruud then pulled away for a 6-7 (1), 6-4, 6-2 victory, his first since Roland Garros.
“Sometimes it is hard to say when you get a good feeling and you start to win some games in a row,” the winner said.
“You try from the first game to the last, but suddenly something clicked in the middle of the second for me, luckily.”
He added: “I had to really fight hard and if I played one bad game in the second and he serves well, it could be over and it would be time to go home. But luckily I can extend the stay.”
The Scandinavian could join Spaniards Sergi Bruguera and Alex Corretja as three-time winners in the Alps, with Ruud now standing 10-1 here over his career.
ATP
Tsitsipas finishes off Kym after overnight pause
Stefanost Tsitsipas said he slept soundly prior to finishing off a darkness-interrupted match on Thursday as he eliminated local Jerome Kym at the Gstaad Swiss Open.
The Greek who once cracked third in the world and the 186th-ranked Swiss returned to the clay after darkness on Wednesday night left them hanging at 5-all in the third set.
Tsitsipas revved up his game from the resumption to emerge into the quarter-finals 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (5).
The second seed now standing 85th in the world after several poor seasons and a split with his father as his coach, said getting his rest was not a problem after the interruption.
“It was strange going to bed and not being finished. I visualised what I wanted to do, my shot patterns.
“It worked out pretty well.
“I had a good night’s sleep, I was not too stressed and I recovered to get ready for the continuation.”
After saving break points in the first game on Thursday, Tsitsipas triumphed in the final-set tiebreaker
“I’m relieved I was able to save a couple of break points.. I put my game together and made it )victory) happen again.”
The Greek now faces off against Frenchman Arthur Rinderknech for a semi-final spot.
“I’m expecting a lot of big serves, the altitude (1050m) helps. I’ll try to build consistency around my own serve.”
ATP
Darkness reprieve for fading Tsitsipas in Gstaad
Stefanos Tsitsipas was handed a reprieve due to fading light with his second round match at the Swiss Open Gstaad stopped with the Greek deadlocked with local Jerome Kym 6-4, 6-7 (2), 5-5.
The math had to be halted as night fell and electronic linecalling computers could not read the path of the ball on the clay in contrast to humans who could have carried on for a few additional minutes..
The 27-year-old Tsitsipas was taking the worst of it in the concluding stage after a promising start.against a journeyman opponent ranked 186.
Tsitsipas, his ranking down to 85th after once standing third in the world, lashed out verbally in the last few games, apparently frustrated with his racquet reactions.
The Greek was quick to make his point of an overnight stoppage to the chair umpire while Kym – who reached 5-all with a love service hold – left the court with a defiant fist pump for his public in this alpine resort village.
The cutoff came after just over two hours of play, with the contest to be concluded on Thursday. The winner reaches the Friday quarter-finals.
Tsitsipas produced his last notable result in April with a fourth-round showing at the Madrid Masters,
He is aiming for his second quarter-final of the season after Doha in February and his 2025 Barcelona 15 months ago.
Tsitsipas stands 10-1 vs. players ranked outside the top 100 this season with a sole loss to No. 104 Italian Matteo Arnaldi at the Roland Garros second round.
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