Stamford Advocate

Nadal ends season because of injured foot

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MADRID — The U.S. Open lost some more star power Friday — Rafael Nadal is gone, undone by a chronic foot injury that will sideline him for the rest of the season.

His announceme­nt further depletes the year’s last major tennis tournament, with Roger Federer already out as well as last year’s champion, Dominic Thiem.

Nadal’s absence also clears one more possible hurdle for Novak Djokovic, who now resumes his bid for a calendar-year Grand Slam without one of his longtime rivals in the men’s draw at Flushing Meadows.

“I am very sorry to announce that I won’t be able to keep playing tennis during the 2021 season,” Nadal said in a video on social media. “But, as you know, I have been suffering too much with my foot for the last year now and I missed a lot of important events for me.”

Federer needs knee surgery and said last weekend he would not play in New York. Thiem said this week he is ending his season after injuring his right wrist in June.

Nadal, Federer and Djokovic share the men’s record of 20 Grand Slam singles titles. Djokovic, in addition to the Grand Slam pursuit, will now be trying to move ahead of his rivals. He won the Australian Open in February, the French Open in June and Wimbledon in July.

Nadal and Federer also both sat out the U.S. Open last year — Nadal because of the pandemic; Federer because he had two operations on his right knee in 2020.

The last time Nadal entered the tournament, in 2019, he won it for one of his four trophies in New York.

The U.S. Open draw is next week and main draw play starts Aug. 30.

Federer (40), Nadal (35) and Djokovic (34) have ruled men’s tennis for more than 15 years, dominating the sport’s most important tournament­s and swapping the No. 1 ranking.

Djokovic beat Nadal in the French Open semifinals and the Spaniard then sat out both Wimbledon and the Olympics because of fatigue.

Speaking in the video, the fourth-ranked Nadal said the foot pain he has been battling most of his career is too much.

“During the last year I was not able to practice and prepare the way I need to be competitiv­e at the standards I want to be,” he said. “The injury is nothing new. It is the same injury I am having since 2005. In that moment the doctors were very negative about my future career. But, honestly, I was able to have a career I was unable to ever dream about, so I am confident I will recover again.”

Nadal insisted he is “going to fight every single day” because he is convinced he still has “a couple of beautiful years” left in his career.

He won two tournament­s this year, on clay in Barcelona and Rome.

 ?? Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / Associated Press ?? Rafael Nadal, of Spain, serves to Daniil Medvedev, of Russia, during the men’s singles final of the U.S. Open tennis championsh­ips in New York in 2019. Nadal pulled out of the U.S. Open on Friday, and said he will not play tennis again this year because of a nagging foot injury.
Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / Associated Press Rafael Nadal, of Spain, serves to Daniil Medvedev, of Russia, during the men’s singles final of the U.S. Open tennis championsh­ips in New York in 2019. Nadal pulled out of the U.S. Open on Friday, and said he will not play tennis again this year because of a nagging foot injury.

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