Auger-Aliassime ‘fine’ after retiring from U.S. Open
Less than 24 hours after a heartbreaking end to his main draw debut at a Grand Slam, Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime is focused on his next tournament instead of the heart palpitations that forced him to retire from his first-round match.
Bernard Duchesneau, the agent for the 18-year-old rising star, said Tuesday that Auger-Aliassime was “feeling fine” within an hour of retiring in the third set of his Monday night match against fellow Canadian Denis Shapovalov.
“We’re already looking at the upcoming schedule and we’re all out of New York, the whole team and Felix and his parents,” Duchesneau said in a phone interview with The Canadian Press. “That’s what it is. It’s sports. Things happen and you turn the page and you move forward.
“Yesterday’s story was obviously not the way we would have written it but it’s just what it is . ... We’re all going to work to make sure next time he’s going to finish the battle and that’s more what the disappointment (was about), not finishing a great battle against a great friend. But he’s fine today. A couple hours after (Monday’s match) he was smiling and joking. He’s not down or anything.”
Trailing 2-0 in the third set, AugerAliassime was seen grimacing and clutching his chest before asking for a medical time out. An ATP doctor, stethoscope in hand, examined him on court and tried to decrease Auger-Aliassime’s heart rate by dumping a bottle of cold water over his head.
Auger-Aliassime played three more games, winning one of them, before deciding to stop the match, ending a much-hyped contest between Canada’s top young tennis stars.
Duchesneau said the cause of AugerAliassime’s elevated heart rate was the heat and humidity in New York, dismissing the notion of a pre-existing condition.
The agent added that Auger-Aliassime saw the ATP Tour doctor briefly Monday night, which he said is protocol, but the Montreal native was not required to see a specialist or undergo any further tests at a hospital.