Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Injured leg ends stay for Serena

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WIMBLEDON, England — Serena Williams bit her upper lip. She held her left hand over her mouth and tried to hold back tears while getting ready to serve.

It was the first set of her first-round match Tuesday at Wimbledon, and Williams knew this stay at a tournament where she has won seven of her 23 Grand Slam singles titles was about to end because she hurt her right leg when she lost her footing behind a baseline.

Moments later, her legs buckled as she tried to change directions to chase a shot by her opponent, 100thranke­d Aliaksandr­a Sasnovich of Belarus. Williams dropped to her knees, her head down on the grass. She used her racket to help her stand, but only so she could limp to the net to concede — just the second mid-match

retirement at any Grand Slam tournament of her career and first since 1998.

“I was heartbroke­n to have to withdraw today,” Williams said in a statement released by the tournament. “Feeling the extraordin­ary warmth and support of the crowd today when I walked on — and off — the court meant the world to me.”

Said Sasnovich: “She’s a great champion, and it’s [a] sad story.”

Williams was serving while leading 3-1 at Centre Court — where the retractabl­e roof was shut because of rain that forced the postponeme­nt of two dozen matches until today — when her left shoe seemed to lose its traction while she was hitting a forehand.

Williams winced and stepped gingerly between points, clearly troubled. After dropping that game, she asked to visit with a trainer and took a medical timeout.

She tried to continue playing. The crowd tried to offer support and encouragem­ent. Eventually, the 39-year-old American couldn’t continue. The chair umpire climbed down to check on her, and they walked together up to the net. The score was 3-3, 15-30 when Williams stopped.

Williams, who began the match with her right thigh heavily taped, raised her racket with her right arm and put her left palm on her chest. Then she waved to the spectators.

Officially, it goes in the books as only the second first-round Grand Slam exit of Williams’ career. The other came at the 2012 French Open, where she was beaten by Virginie Razzano. Shortly after that, Williams teamed up with coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u and began accumulati­ng majors to eclipse Steffi Graf’s profession­al era record of 22 and move within one of Margaret Court’s all-era mark of 24.

“All the best for her,” said Sasnovich, who reached the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2018 for her best Grand Slam result.

Williams was hardly the first player to find it difficult to deal with the slick grass over the first two days of main-draw play.

In the match that preceded hers in the main stadium, eight-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer advanced when his opponent, Adrian Mannarino, injured his right knee late in the fourth set when he tumbled near the same spot Williams did.

Federer was trailing two sets to one, but ahead 4-2 in the fourth, when Mannarino fell. He tried to continue but dropped eight of nine points when they resumed and called it quits.

“Obviously,” Federer acknowledg­ed, “he was the better player.”

Novak Djokovic fell twice in the first set of his firstround victory Monday at Centre Court, too.

“I do feel it feels a tad more slippery, maybe, under the roof. I don’t know if it’s just a gut feeling. You do have to move very, very carefully out there. If you push too hard in the wrong moments, you do go down,” Federer said. “I do feel it’s drier during the day. With the wind and all that stuff, it takes the moist out of the grass. But this is obviously terrible.”

It was, by far, the most significan­t developmen­t Tuesday, when the winners included Williams’ older sister, 41-yearold Venus, 17-year-old Coco Gauff, reigning French Open champion Barbora Krejcikova and No. 1 seed Ash Barty in the women’s bracket; and No. 2 Daniil Medvedev, No. 4 Alexander Zverev and No. 10 Denis Shapovalov in the men’s.

Sebastian Korda — a 20-year-old American whose father, Petr, won the 1998 Australian Open and whose sisters, No. 1-ranked Nelly and No. 13 Jessica, are on the LPGA Tour — made a successful Wimbledon debut, eliminatin­g No. 15 seed Alex de Minaur 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (5).

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Williams
 ?? (AP/Kirsty Wiggleswor­th) ?? A referee helps Serena Williams leave the court after she retired from the Wimbledon women’s singles first-round match against Aliaksandr­a Sasnovich on Tuesday in London.
(AP/Kirsty Wiggleswor­th) A referee helps Serena Williams leave the court after she retired from the Wimbledon women’s singles first-round match against Aliaksandr­a Sasnovich on Tuesday in London.

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