The Scotsman

Long-term health fears for Nadal

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Rafael Nadal called on the tennis authoritie­s to think about players’ long-term health after retiring from his quarter-final against Marin Cilic at the Australian Open with a leg injury.

The world No 1 looked to be on his way to yet another grand slam semi-final when he moved two sets to one in front but he called for the trainer after going a break down in the fourth set.

Nadal took a medical time-out but was clearly hampered in his movement and, after limping around the court for two games at the start of the fifth set, he headed to the net to shake hands.

The 3-6, 6-3, 6-7 (5/7), 6-2, 2-0 victory gave Cilic a first victory over Nadal since 2009 and sent him through to his first Australian Open semi-final since defeat by Andy Murray in 2010.

With Novak Djokovic hampered by an ongoing elbow issue in his loss to Chung Hyeon on Monday and Murray failing to make the tournament because of hip problems, Nadal said: “Somebody who is running the tour should think a little bit about what’s going on. Too many people are getting injured.

“I don’t know if they have to think a little bit about the health of the players. Not for now that we are playing, but there is life after tennis. I don’t know, if we keep playing on these very, very hard surfaces, what’s going to happen in the future with our lives.”

After limping slowly into the press room, the 31-year-old said of his injury: “I started to feel the muscle was a little bit tired in the third set, but I was playing normal, no limitation.

“Then in the fourth, one movement, one drop shot I think, I felt something.”

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