Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
More
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Osaka felt 'really scared' after Saville retires with knee injury in Tokyo

AFP
Saville (left) was forced to retire moments into her match with Osaka (right) at the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo
Saville (left) was forced to retire moments into her match with Osaka (right) at the Pan Pacific Open in TokyoAFP
Naomi Osaka (24) said she felt "really scared" after watching opponent Daria Saville (28) collapse with a knee injury just seven minutes into their Pan Pacific Open match in Tokyo on Tuesday.

Australian Saville retired from their first-round encounter after hurting her left knee hitting a cross-court forehand in the second game of the match.

The world number 55 yelled out "my knee" before dropping to the ground in agony, and Osaka rushed over to her side of the court to check on her opponent.

Saville retired from the match after several minutes of treatment and Osaka, who has struggled with injury herself this year, said she felt "really sad" for her opponent.

"I thought that she was just yelling because she thought her forehand was out, then I realised that she was yelling because she was in pain," said the former world number one, who is aiming to break a slump in form this week in Tokyo.

"Then I got really scared because I felt like as athletes we have a pretty high pain tolerance. It seemed really bad."

Saville eventually got up and walked over to her chair, but she retired after testing her knee with several footwork exercises.

Osaka added she thought Saville was "going to be OK", saying that she was "a fighter".

Osaka, who was on break point at 30-40 in the second game after holding her serve in the first game, will play Brazil's Beatriz Haddad Maia in the second round on Thursday.

"Right now, it still feels a bit weird that I just won a match - I feel like I didn't win a match," said Osaka, who has lost in the first round at her last three tournaments.

"I guess that I did and I'm progressing through the tournament. I'm not really thinking too much about the final right now."

Osaka is the defending Pan Pacific Open champion, although the tournament is being played for the first time since 2019 because of the pandemic.

France gouvernement

Les jeux d’argent et de hasard peuvent être dangereux : pertes d’argent, conflits familiaux, addiction…

Retrouvez nos conseils sur www.joueurs-info-service.fr (09-74-75-13-13, appel non surtaxé)