Sports & Fitness

Tennis star Medvedev set for op after months ‘playing with a small hernia’

World number two’s participation in upcoming French Open in doubt as 26-year-old expects to be out for 1-2 months

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 03 Apr 2022 6:00PM

Tennis star Medvedev set for op after months ‘playing with a small hernia’
Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev (pictured above in 2020) looked physically diminished during his match against Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz in the Miami Open quarter finals − taking a long break in the locker room between sets and asking for the physiotherapist after having been repeatedly forced to lean on his racket, back bent, to recover after rallies. – AFP pic, April 3, 2022

PARIS − World number two Daniil Medvedev announced yesterday he will undergo surgery to fix a hernia problem and could be sidelined for up to two months − casting doubt on his participation in next month’s French Open.

“The last months I have been playing with a small hernia,” the 26-year-old Russian said in a post on Twitter.

“Together with my team I have decided to have a small procedure done to fix the problem. I will likely be out for the next 1-2 months and will work hard to be back on court soon.”

The second Grand Slam of the season takes place in Roland Garros from May 22-June 5.

Medvedev won the US Open last year but lost the Australian Open final to Rafael Nadal in January.

On Friday, the Russian failed in his bid to reclaim the world number one ranking from Novak Djokovic after falling 7-6 (9/7), 6-3 to Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz in the Miami Open quarterfinals. 

During this match, he looked physically diminished, taking a long break in the locker room between the two sets and asking for the intervention of the physiotherapist after having been repeatedly forced to lean on his racket, back bent, to recover after rallies. 

Medvedev said he found it hard to breathe at times and was cramping so badly in the locker room he was like “a fish on a sofa”.

“All throughout the match, I wasn’t feeling my best,” Medvedev said. “After the tough points, I was struggling to get my breath. I wasn’t recovering fast enough. You just have to fight but in the second set, I felt strange.

“I don’t often feel like this but it happens sometimes when it’s hot. Maybe it was the heat but I was feeling dizzy and tired and there was one game where I couldn’t serve anymore. In the locker room, I was cramping.” – AFP, April 3, 2022

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