Thursday, October 24

Shapovalov Working out of Endurance with Injured Knee

By Chris Oddo | @TheFanChild | Sunday July 9, 2023

Denis Shapovalov has been hampered by – and taking part in by – a critical knee harm, and it got here again to chew him as soon as once more at Wimbledon, as he skilled ache and his efficiency fell off a cliff in a 3-6 6-3 6-1 6-3 loss to Russia’s Roman Safiullin.

The Canadian has been bothered by the harm for some time, and even thought-about skipping the clay season and many of the grass season, with a plan to return at Wimbledon, however determined to attempt to play on and handle the ache as an alternative.

“First and foremost, hopefully I can get healthy soon,” Shapovalov stated. “Hopefully I can solve the problem with the knee. Yeah, try to fix it. Happy it didn’t flare up in the first round, but at the same time, it’s difficult to play tennis when, yeah, when I had the issue that I have.”

Shapovalov, who reached the spherical of 16 regardless of the difficulties, is now considering shutting down his season for some time to conduct a extra in depth rehab.

The Twenty ninth-ranked Canadian, aged 24, is 13-13 on the season.

“It’s normal because I haven’t done a full recovery on it,” he stated of the harm. “It’s not shocking that it happened. It is disappointing, obviously. Obviously it felt like I was playing good tennis, and had chances today to maybe get into the quarterfinals.

It’s definitely something that I need to fix fully. Maybe do the full treatment on it. Take more time off of tennis to really fix it. Because, yeah, they basically said until I get stronger it’s going to kind of be like this. That’s if I want to keep playing.

Shapovalov declined to talk more about the injury, other than saying it has bothered him throughout his career, and started to flare up again last fall.

Asked how long a proper recovery might take, he said:

“I think the minimum would be two months. Yeah, I mean, hopefully no surgery,” he stated. “Obviously with surgery it would be much longer, but I would say the minimum would be two months.”

Content Source: www.tennisnow.com