Daily Tribune (Philippines)

TEARFUL SETBACK

I knew I wasn’t going to be able to continue

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TORONTO, Canada — Serena Williams saw her US Open preparatio­n thrown into disarray as back spasms forced her out of the WTA Toronto final after just four games, handing Canadian teenager Bianca Andreescu the title.

Andreescu was up 3-1 with a break of serve when 23-time Grand Slam champion Williams found she couldn’t continue.

She called for a medical timeout, but within a minute the umpire announced she was retiring.

“I just knew,” said Williams, adding she had undergone hours of treatment before the match to combat the back spasms she first felt in a semifinal win. “I knew I wasn’t going to be able to continue.”

Andreescu approached her chair, offering words of encouragem­ent and a consolator­y hug as Williams tried to fight back tears.

“I’m sorry I couldn’t do it today,” Williams told the crowd, her voice cracking. “I tried but I just couldn’t do it.”

Williams said the spasms started during her come-from-behind win over Czech qualifier Marie Bouzkova on “and it just got worse.”

“Just my whole back just completely spasmed and to a point where I couldn’t sleep and I couldn’t really move,” she said.

Neverthele­ss, she wanted to give it a go in the final.

“I don’t want to get this far and not at least try,” said the 37-year-old, who was eyeing her 73rd WTA title and her first since the birth of her daughter, Olympia, in September of 2017.

Beaten by Simona Halep in the Wimbledon final in July, Williams was playing just her 24th match of the year already disrupted by nagging knee trouble.

Williams hasn’t won a title since the 2017 Australian Open.

Since returning to competitio­n after Olympia’s birth she has reached three Grand Slam finals — and she remained optimistic that she would be ready to try to match Australian Margaret Court’s record of 24 Grand Slams when the US Open starts on 26 August.

“Well, that’s the most frustratin­g part is that I’ve had this before and it’s, like, 24, 36 hours where I’m just in crazy spasm and then it’s, like, gone,” said Williams, who wasn’t immediatel­y sure whether she’d play next week in Cincinnati.

“So that’s a little bit frustratin­g for me because I know that I could play. I just can’t play today.

“If it’s what typically happens, I will be fine, but I have to wait and see.”

I don’t want to get this far and not at least try.

For Andreescu, Sunday’s events were a bitterswee­t achievemen­t as she became the first Canadian to win the title since Faye Urban in 1969.

“I know how it is to pull out of tournament­s and be injured, it’s not easy,” Andreescu said, addressing Williams directly during the trophy presentati­on.

“This wasn’t the way I expected to win and for you to go off the court. I’ve watched you play so many times, you are truly a champion on and off the court.” Andreescu claimed her second WTA Premier level title of the year, having rocketed to prominence in March when she became the first wild card to win at Indian Wells.

“This week has not been easy. I’ve had many, many tough matches,” said Andreescu, who opened the week with an emotional three-set win over compatriot Eugenie Bouchard and played three more three-setters.

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 ??  ?? SERENA Williams retires due to back spasm to hand Bianca Andreescu the WTA Toronto crown. AFP
SERENA Williams retires due to back spasm to hand Bianca Andreescu the WTA Toronto crown. AFP

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