Bangkok Post

Injuries cloud Open build-up

- Serena Williams trains in Melbourne.

MELBOURNE: A catalogue of injuries threatens to play havoc with the Australian Open and put more pressure on women’s tour organisers to reform the playing schedule.

Injuries or illness have felled most of the women’s top 10 in recent weeks, in what is either a hefty dose of bad luck or something more avoidable.

World No.1 Serena Williams is chief among the injury concerns after she pulled out of the Hopman Cup exhibition tournament with a sore knee.

But the 21-time Grand Slam-winner is not alone, with only her sister Venus and Flavia Pennetta — who has retired — unscathed among the women’s top 10.

Simona Halep, Garbine Muguruza, Agnieszka Radwanska and Maria Sharapova have all pulled out of build-up tournament­s because of injury concerns.

Meanwhile Petra Kvitova and Angelique Kerber have been hit by gastroente­ritis, while Lucie Safarova is skipping Melbourne because of a problems linked to a bacterial infection.

While illness is largely uncontroll­able, Williams, Halep and Sharapova are all still hampered by injuries which affected them last season, whose tail-end was unusually busy.

Incoming Women’s Tennis Associatio­n Steve Simon has already promised “fundamenta­l changes” to the demanding calendar after a rash of injuries and withdrawal­s towards the end of last season.

“Clearly one of the big issues that we have right now is dealing with... getting our athletes through the season healthy,” he said at the WTA Finals in Singapore.

Whether injuries have a major impact on the Australian Open remains to be seen, but there are certainly concerns over Williams, who has not played a competitiv­e match since September.

The American great retired during her only match at the Hopman Cup in Perth, and Australian Open organisers will hope she meant what she said when she insisted she was “feeling great now”.

Sharapova, injured for much of last season, has also expressed confidence about her recovery from a forearm problem which first surfaced in September and forced her to drop out of Brisbane.

Second-ranked Halep is having trouble shaking off an Achilles injury which also affected her last year, but after withdrawin­g from Brisbane she played this week in Sydney.

World No.3 Muguruza retired from her first match in Brisbane with a foot problem, and fourth-ranked Radwanska withdrew from Sydney with a leg injury.

For women’s legend Martina Navratilov­a, “the number of injuries withdrawal­s is still too high”.

“You got to think long-term. Maybe it’s great to have all these tournament­s but at the end of the day, if you don’t have enough players playing, you got a problem,” she said at the WTA Finals.

 ?? AFP ??
AFP

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