Raonic suffers leg injury in quarterfinal loss
LONDON — Battling both his opponent’s powerful serve and his own injury-prone body, Canadian Milos Raonic bowed out in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon for the second year in a row.
Raonic, the No. 13 seed at the All England Club, lost 6-7 (5), 7-6 (7), 6-4, 6-3 against No. 9 seed John Isner of the U.S., on Wednesday in a battle between two of the most powerful servers in tennis.
After the match, Raonic said he felt like he tore a muscle in his right leg in the first set. He called for a trainer to tape it up while leading 6-5 in the first.
“I don’t know to what extent,” Raonic said. “That’s sort of the sensation I had.”
Raonic said the injury bothered him while serving and any time he got low at the net.
The tennis star from Thornhill, Ont., is no stranger to injury, having pulled out of last month’s Queen’s Club tournament with a right pectoral strain and missing much of the clay-court season, including the French Open, with an undisclosed ailment.
The former world No. 3 also had an injury-riddled 2017 campaign, including a seven-week absence due to wrist surgery that cost him a chance to play at the U.S. Open.
The injured leg aside, Wednesday’s match played out as expected between two hard servers with limited mobility.
“I think it was pretty by the script,” Raonic said. “As long as I could hold it, I tried to. Just sort of kept slipping away from me slowly.” Isner is the only player at Wimbledon this year not to have had his serve broken — and Raonic had just one break-point opportunity against the 6-foot-10 American.
Isner responded with an ace on that occasion and then went on to take the third set. Isner converted on 3-of-6 break-point chances. The first break-point opportunity of the match came in the third set, and Isner made the most of it to go up 3-2.
Isner fought off a set point in the second set, which marked the eighth straight set to go to a tiebreaker between the two players.
Raonic, fell two wins short of matching his best showing at Wimbledon — a runner-up finish in 2016.
Isner will face No. 8 seed Kevin Anderson of South Africa in the semifinals. Anderson upset top seed Roger Federer of Switzerland on Wednesday.
Provided the injury is not serious, Raonic could make a return at the Rogers Cup in Toronto, which starts Aug. 4.
Meanwhile, Canadian Gabriela Dabrowski is heading to the semifinals in women’s doubles. The Ottawa native and partner Yifan Xu of China, the tournament’s sixth seeds, defeated the unseeded pair of Bethanie Mattek-Sands of the U.S., and Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 in a quarterfinal on Wednesday.