Nick Kyrgios’s withdrawal from the French Open was due to a reduce foot sustained when a person allegedly stole his automobile at gunpoint, his agent says, somewhat than knee surgical procedure.
The French Tennis Federation mentioned this week the Australian would miss Roland Garros as a result of surgical procedure in January to restore a torn left meniscus.
But his agent advised The Canberra Times the knee was “fine” and a nasty reduce to the foot was why he wouldn’t be in Paris subsequent week.
“The knee surgery went as well as it possibly could and his rehabilitation was fantastic and we were at the point where we were doing on-court loading and management,” Daniel Horsfall advised the newspaper.
“We needed to be at a point where he could comfortably play five sets. Right when we were getting stuck into the loading period, the (alleged) armed robbery happened at his house.
“During the ordeal he cut his foot quite badly. It’s not healing correctly and he can’t put in the work on court, so he’s been off court for almost two weeks now.”
Court paperwork cited by nationwide broadcaster ABC earlier this month alleged {that a} man pointed a gun at Kyrgios’s mom earlier than stealing his lime-green Tesla close to his dwelling in Canberra.
The 28-year-old Kyrgios, who was close by, referred to as the police and utilizing an app on his cellphone helped them monitor his automobile’s location. It will not be clear how he reduce his foot.
The 2022 Wimbledon finalist, ranked 26 on the earth, has not performed the French Open since a second-round exit in 2017.
He has by no means flourished on the Roland Garros clay, reaching the third spherical on simply two of the 5 instances he has performed there.
Kyrgios has had a troubled yr, pleading responsible in February to assaulting a former girlfriend. He averted a conviction for what the Justice of the Peace referred to as a “single act of stupidity”.
His grandmother died this week.
“Seems like I can’t catch a break right now,” Kyrgios mentioned on social media, accompanied by pictures of his late “Yiayia” — the Greek phrase for grandmother.
“RIP Yiayia, the best we could ask for. Go enjoy your time with Papou now.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com