Eastern Eye (UK)

Murray defends Raducanu withdrawal

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SIR ANDY MURRAY has defended British teenager Emma Raducanu after John McEnroe and several others said the 18-yearold wildcard pulled out of her Wimbledon last-16 match on Monday (5) because she could not handle the pressure.

Raducanu’s remarkable Wimbledon debut ended in distressin­g circumstan­ces as she was forced to retire against Australian Ajla Tomljanovi­c after suffering breathing difficulti­es in the second set.

“At the end of the first set, after some super intense rallies, I started to breathe heavily and felt dizzy,” Raducanu said on Twitter on Tuesday. “The medical team advised me not to continue and although it felt like the hardest thing in the world not to be able to finish my Wimbledon on the court, I was not well enough to carry on.”

Two-times Wimbledon champion McEnroe had suggested on the BBC the occasion “got a little bit too much” for Raducanu. He compared her anxiety with Naomi Osaka’s mental health struggles.

Osaka had withdrawn from the French Open after the first round and skipped the grass court swing for the sake of her mental wellbeing, but Murray said McEnroe was quick to jump the gun without understand­ing why Raducanu had breathing issues.

“I think some of what he said was fair, yes,” Murray said on Twitter. “However the timing of it was a bit off considerin­g nobody had any clue what her issue was injury/illness/breathing issues etc at the time of his comments.”

Former England cricketer Kevin Pietersen said sport was about “dealing with pressure, bad form, (and) negative media” but Murray said that was not the case with Raducanu.

“No question mental toughness can be what separates the best in sport but surely... you aren’t judging her mental toughness on yesterday’s match,” he added.

Pietersen later said he had “no clue about the context” and did not know the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the discussion on Twitter.

Raducanu is ranked 338 in the world and two months ago she was sitting school exams. Until a month ago she had not even contested a match on the main WTA Tour.

“We were very sad to see Emma forced to withdraw from her match last night and wish her all the best with her recovery,” Wimbledon organisers said.

Tomljanovi­c, who had a row with Jelena Ostapenko when the Latvian took a medical timeout in their third-round encounter, said McEnroe’s comments were “harsh”.

“I can’t imagine being in her (Raducanu’s) shoes at 18, playing a fourth round in your home country,” she said.

“For him to say that, it’s definitely harsh. I have experience­d something similar but not to that extent. I know it’s a real thing.”

 ??  ?? HARSH WORDS: Emma Raducanu
HARSH WORDS: Emma Raducanu

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