US Open champion Osaka withdraws from French Open with injury

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LOS ANGELES, Sept 18, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Freshly crowned US Open champion
Naomi Osaka pulled out of the French Open with a sore hamstring on Thursday,
in a fresh blow to the coronavirus-hit Grand Slam which is already missing
world number one Ashleigh Barty.

Japan’s Osaka made the announcement just days after lifting her third major
title behind closed doors at the US Open in New York, the first Grand Slam
tournament possible since the pandemic.

“Unfortunately I won’t be able to play the French Open this year,” Osaka
said in posts on Instagram and Twitter. “My hamstring is still sore so I
won’t have enough time to prepare for the clay — these two tournaments came
too close to each other for me this year.”

The French Open is due to start on September 27 at Roland Garros,
rescheduled from earlier in the year because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The withdrawal of third-ranked Osaka means Roland Garros will be missing
two of the world’s top three, after reigning champion Barty said earlier this
month that she wouldn’t return to defend her title.

The Australian said she feared participation still carried health risks,
and she had not been able to train with her coach because of the state border
closures in her home country.

Osaka’s announcement also came just hours after French Open organisers were
forced to slash daily attendance from 11,500 to 5,000 as coronavirus cases
surge in France.

– History-maker –

On Sunday, Osaka rallied from a set down to beat Victoria Azarenka 1-6, 6-
3, 6-3 in the US Open women’s final, adding a third major trophy after her
2018 US Open and 2019 Australian Open triumphs.

The 22-year-old was the first woman to win the US Open singles final from a
set down since 1994, and the victory moved her to third in the WTA rankings.

She also became the first Asian player to win three Grand Slams, overtaking
China’s Li Na on two.

Osaka pocketed $3 million for the victory, another big haul for the player
who in May was reported by Forbes to be the highest paid female athlete in
the world, the magazine calculating her earnings over the prior 12 months at
$37.4 million (34.3 million euros).

Osaka, who has never made it out of the third round of the French Open, did
not say when she will play next.

She did assure her fans they would see her “sooner than later”.

In addition to her on-court excellence, Osaka was in the spotlight in New
York for her activism on behalf of racial justice.

During the Western & Southern, also held at Flushing Meadows, she boycotted
her semi-final match to express solidarity with athletes in other sports
protesting the shooting of Jacob Blake by police in Wisconsin.

The tournament opted to pause play for a day and she agreed to play her
semi-final.

At the US Open, Osaka wore a different mask to each of her seven matches,
all bearing the name of a victim of racial injustice and police brutality.

– Critics ‘inspired me’ –

Her stance drew praise from many, and Osaka had a defiant response on
social media to those who did complain.

“All the people that were telling me to ‘keep politics out of sports’,
(which it wasn’t political at all), really inspired me to win,” Osaka, who is
of Japanese and Haitian heritage, tweeted.

“You better believe I’m gonna try to be on your tv for as long as
possible.”

But Osaka had gone into the US Open with fitness concerns.

She pulled out of the final of the Western & Southern Open with a left
hamstring injury just two days before the start of the Grand Slam in New
York.

She said she pulled the muscle in her semi-final victory over Elise
Mertens.

Osaka played her US Open matches with her left thigh heavily strapped, but
showed no sign the injury hindered her.

The US Open, normally the final Grand Slam in a season, was just the second
major to be played in 2020 after the Australian Open in January.

The Covid-19 pandemic brought tennis to a halt along with the rest of
global sport, with Wimbledon cancelled and Roland Garros moved from its usual
May start to September 27-October 11.