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View Full Version : Sharapova says she’ll miss US Open after Olympics



zatoicchi
02.08.08, 09:54
Maria Sharapova will sit out the U.S. Open because of a bad right shoulder, the first major championship she’ll miss since her Grand Slam debut in 2003.

The three-time Grand Slam title winner already had announced she’s pulling out of the Beijing Olympics because of the injury. Sharapova said in a posting on her Web site Friday she probably won’t need surgery and could be ready to play in two to three months.

“It hurts me so much to miss the Olympics and the U.S. Open, you have no idea,” she said. “Just to type those words hurt!!”

Earlier Friday, a U.S. Open official told The Associated Press that Sharapova’s agent informed the tournament she wouldn’t be able to play in the year’s last Grand Slam event.

The No. 3-ranked Sharapova has played in each of the past 23 major championships, winning titles at Wimbledon in 2004, the U.S. Open in 2006 and the Australian Open in January.

A doctor who looked at tests on her shoulder from April and this week told Sharapova she has been playing with a torn rotator cuff tendon since the spring.

“He actually couldn’t believe that I’ve been playing this long with this injury. You can imagine that I was not very thrilled to hear that my medical team did not see this tear in my shoulder back in April,” she said. “The good news is that it didn’t get much worse since April, but we could have started the healing time back then instead of now.”

Sharapova will go to Arizona to work with a specialist for rehab and strength work.

“Now I need to move forward and stay positive,” she said. “I am going to work hard to get healthy.”

Sharapova says she'll miss US Open after Olympics (http://sports.yahoo.com/ten/news;_ylt=Ao7wsXqj7pZFMwhOVbnbBaI4v7YF?slug=ap-usopen-sharapovaout&prov=ap&type=lgns)

zatoicchi
02.08.08, 09:55
MASON, Ohio (AP)—For Rafael Nadal, moving up to No. 1 is just a matter of time.

The 22-year-old Spaniard made a change at the top inevitable Friday by advancing to the semifinals of the Cincinnati Masters. He beat Nicolas Lapentti 7-6 (3), 6-1 for his 32nd straight win, setting up a seismic shift in the world rankings.

After three years of chasing Roger Federer, he’s about to pass him.

Nadal would take over the top spot in next week’s rankings if he wins the tournament. Even if he fails, he now has piled up enough points in Cincinnati to overtake Federer when the rankings come out on Aug. 18. The rankings include points earned in the last 52 weeks, and time is on Nadal’s side.

He knew it when he took the court, and thought about it “a little bit” during the match. When Lapentti’s forehand return sailed wide to finish off the match. Nadal joyously smacked a tennis ball and tossed his wristbands into the stands

Nadal reaches semifinals, poised to become No. 1 (http://sports.yahoo.com/ten/news;_ylt=AquQ2zCUGNRjHDCjNgahKkM4v7YF?slug=ap-cincinnati&prov=ap&type=lgns)