Times Colonist

Champion Andreescu pulls out of U.S. Open

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With her preparatio­ns hampered during the COVID-19 pandemic, defending champion Bianca Andreescu said Thursday she has dropped out of the U.S. Open. The Canadian called it a difficult decision.

Andreescu hasn’t played a match since suffering a knee injury last October.

“I have taken this step in order to focus on my match fitness and ensure that I return ready to play at my highest level,” Andreescu said. “The U.S. Open victory last year has been the high point of my career thus far and I will miss being there. However, I realize that the unforeseen challenges, including the COVID pandemic, have compromise­d my ability to prepare and compete to the degree necessary to play at the highest level.”

The New York tournament will be missing both reigning singles champions. Men’s champ Rafael Nadal of Spain dropped out this month, saying he did not want travel amid the pandemic.

One big name who said Thursday he will be at the U.S. Open and the hard-court tuneup tournament that will precede it at Flushing Meadows: No. 1 Novak Djokovic. That means one member of the Big Three of men’s tennis will be present. In addition to Nadal’s absence, Roger Federer is out for the rest of the season after two operations on his right knee.

Andreescu tweeted in support of the United States Tennis Associatio­n’s decision to go ahead with the U.S. Open without fans in June. Twenty-year-old Andreescu, from Mississaug­a, Ont., hinted she was nearing a return before COVID-19 shuttered the sports world in March. But Andreescu, ranked sixth in the world, didn’t enter any of the four events before the U.S. Open in the sport’s restart in August.

Andreescu joins world No. 1 Ash Barty of Australia, No. 5 Elina Svitolina of Ukraine and No. 7 Kiki Bertens of the Netherland­s in skipping the U.S. Open, Aug. 31-Sept. 13.

The season’s third and final Grand Slam, the French Open, has been reschedule­d for Sept. 27-Oct. 10. Wimbledon was cancelled this year.

Ranked outside the top 150 before last season, Andreescu rocketed into the top 10 with tournament victories at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., the Rogers Cup in Toronto and the U.S. Open, where she upset American legend Serena Williams in the final to become the first Canadian to win a singles Grand Slam.

“It’s no secret that I really like her as a person and as a player,” Williams said Thursday after defeating her sister Venus Williams at the Top Seed Open in Kentucky. “I just think she’s so mature and so cool. She’ll come back, she’ll do well when she’s ready.”

Andreescu has been hampered by injuries for large chunks of her career. Even in her breakthrou­gh 2019 campaign, she missed most of the clay- and grass-court seasons because of injury.

The Lou Marsh Award winner as Canada’s top athlete in 2019, Andreescu emerged from relative obscurity to reach the final of last year’s season-opening event in New Zealand with wins over former world No. 1s Venus Williams and Caroline Wozniacki.

Andreescu rode that momentum into Indian Wells, considered one of the top tournament­s on the WTA Tour after the four Grand Slams. She upset Germany’s Angelique Kerber in the final.

Just a week later, the two met again with Andreescu prevailing in a tight match in Miami, after which an emotional Kerber called the Canadian a “drama queen.”

However, Andreescu retired from her next match with a shoulder injury, keeping her out of all but one tournament before the Rogers Cup.

• PRAGUE, Czech Republic — Canada’s Eugenie Bouchard is in the quarter finals at the Prague Open. Bouchard, from Westmount, Que., beat Tamara Zidansek of Slovenia 7-6 (2), 6-7 (2), 6-2 in the second round of the WTA Tour clay-court event on Thursday.

Bouchard exacted revenge on the 72ndranked Zidansek, who beat the Canadian in the opening round of Wimbledon last year with an 8-6 triumph in the third set.

Zidansek fought back from a 4-1 deficit in the second set to force a third set Thursday before Bouchard regained control, prevailing in two hours 52 minutes.

“I was pretty proud of myself with how I was able to bounce back after losing the second set,” Bouchard said.

“I kind of regrouped and told myself to just get back to playing my game. Not let her dominate the ball, but kind of step up and take advantage.”

 ?? AP ?? Bianca Andreescu after winning the women’s singles title at the U.S. Open in New York last September.
AP Bianca Andreescu after winning the women’s singles title at the U.S. Open in New York last September.

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