ROME – With just 10 days to go before the French Open, Rafael Nadal is struggling with an injury again. Nadal was hampered by a foot problem toward the end of a 1-6, 7-5, 6-2 third-round loss to Denis Shapovalov at the Italian Open.
Elsewhere, Iga Swiatek continued her hot streak by seeing off Victoria Azarenka 6-4, 6-1 to move into the Italian Open quarter-finals.
At one point, the 35-year-old Nadal walked over and leaned on his towel box and grimaced in apparent pain. He also limped between points.
Nadal missed a large portion of last year with a left foot injury.
“I hurt my foot again with a lot of pain,” Nadal said according to AP. “I´m a player living with an injury. It´s nothing new. It´s something that is there, unfortunately. Day by day is difficult.
It was a worrisome scene for Nadal – especially with the French Open starting on May 22.
“What can happen in the next couple of days, I don´t know,” said Nadal, who has won Roland Garros a record 13 times. “What can happen in one week, I really don´t know now.”
Nadal returned to the tour last week following a rib stress fracture that kept him out for six weeks after a blistering start to the year that included his record 21st Grand Slam title at the Australian Open.
“It´s difficult for me to accept the situation sometimes,” Nadal said. “Can be frustrating that a lot of days I can´t practice the proper way.”
Nadal was also beaten by 19-year-old Carlos Alcaraz in the quarter-finals of last week´s Madrid Open.
Nadal double-faulted twice then missed a backhand long to hand Shapovalov a break of his serve and the second set. Shapovalov then took complete control when he won 14 straight points late in the third.
“Definitely tough to see him in pain there at the end,” said Shapovalov, who will face Casper Ruud in the quarter-finals. “I never want to see that, especially with a great legend like Rafa. … He brings so much to our sport. Hopefully he´s fit and ready to go for the French.”
Nadal, who has won the Italian Open a record 10 times, said his foot started hurting midway through the second set, adding: “Then (it) wasn´t playable for me.”
Earlier, top-ranked Novak Djokovic was untroubled in a 6-2, 6-2 win over Stan Wawrinka, who was playing only his second tournament after undergoing two surgeries on his left foot.
In the women’s tournament, top-ranked Iga Swiatek was tested before pulling out a 6-4, 6-1 victory over former No. 1 Victoria Azarenka to reach the quarterfinals and extend her winning streak to 25 matches.
Azarenka took a 3-0 lead before Swiatek won five straight games in a grueling first set that lasted 1 hour, 20 minutes.
“My first serve wasn´t working properly,” Swiatek said “But I´m happy that I could kind of win ugly in the first set, then improve in the second. It gives me confidence that even when my game is not 100% good, I can still win matches.”
Swiatek is attempting to win her fifth straight tournament and defend her title in Rome.
The last player to win more consecutive matches was Serena Williams, who had a streak of 27 in a row over 2014 and 2015.
“(The streak) doesn´t really matter for me because every match is different,” Swiatek said. “In many matches, I struggled this season, even though I won them. Anything can happen. Every match is a different story.”
Swiatek´s run makes her a favorite to win a second French Open when the year´s second Grand Slam gets underway in 10 days. When Swiatek won at Roland Garros in 2020 she was ranked No. 54 – making her the lowest-ranked woman to win the Paris major in the Open era.
In a sign of how challenging it was for Swiatek to hold serve on the red clay court at the Foro Italico, she played more than twice as many points on her serve than Azarenka did – 98 to 47.
Azarenka was rattled when a spectator entered the front row of the mostly empty VIP section just behind her as she was facing a break point late in the first set. When she then double-faulted to hand Swiatek control of the set, she slammed her racket in frustration and complained to the chair umpire about the mid-game interruption.
The loudest cheers of the day were for Jannik Sinner, the 20-year-old Italian who beat Filip Krajinovic 6-2, 7-6 (6) to reach the quarterfinals for the first time at his home tournament.
Also, 2017 Rome champion Alexander Zverev, who is also coming off a run to the Madrid final, beat Alex De Minaur 6-3, 7-6 (5).
Zverev, who is still seeking his first title of the year, has his father and coach, Alexander, back on the circuit with him after a prolonged absence for reasons the family has kept personal.
When Zverev won the ATP Finals in November, his older brother and fellow pro, Mischa, was coaching him.
“I was missing a coach for six months,” Zverev said. “That´s what was missing.”