Fifth seed Kiki Bertens leaves court in wheelchair following win at French Open
By Ben Morse, CNN
PARIS, FRANCE September 30. Kiki Bertens of The Netherlands is taken off the court in a wheel chair after winning her marathon match against Sara Errani of Italy in the second round of the singles competition on Court Fourteen during the French Open Tennis Tournament at Roland Garros on September 30th 2020 in Paris, France. (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)
Fifth seed Kiki Bertens left the court in a wheelchair Wednesday after her grueling, fiery three-set victory over Sara Errani in the second round of the French Open.
Bertens struggled with cramps as the final set developed, eventually sinking to the clay in relief and pain following her 7-6 (7-5), 3-6, 9-7 victory, which took three hours and 11 minutes.
The Dutchwoman had to overcome a 5-2 deficit and save a match-point in the third set while struggling with cramps that became so bad she needed the wheelchair at Roland Garros.
Errani, who appeared to mock Bertens’ cramp during the game, left the court without tapping racquets at the net as is customary, and also shouted an obscenity as she departed.
“After one hour, she’s injured but then she’s running around like never before,” Errani, runner-up at the French Open in 2012, told the media.
“She leaves the court in a chair and now she’s in the locker room and eating in the restaurant, perfect. She exaggerated. It made me very angry. So, well done to her, but she can win without doing that.”
For the clay-court expert Rafael Nadal, it was more of the same Wednesday.
The Spaniard dropped just four games as he breezed past American Mackenzie McDonald to advance to the third round, winning 6-1, 6-0, 6-3.
It took Nadal just 35 minutes to win the first set and, after breaking McDonald’s opening service game of the second set, he dominated the match.
The 34-year-old faced zero break points and hit only 15 unforced errors.
“I am just trying my best every single day. I am working hard in every practice to try to be better and better in every match,” Nadal said. “Today was not that cold, so that’s the main thing. Not that cold, the conditions are not that bad.”
Nadal has won the French Open a record 12 times and has lost only two French Open matches since 2005.