tennis

Norrie's French Open preparations hit by rib injury

BBC Sport

"I probably should have retired. I kept pushing because I had never retired before in a match in my career, so I wasn't sure what to do. "But I'm here.

Luckily I'm scheduled on Tuesday, so it gives me some time to get ready. " Norrie has developed a reputation as the 'Mr Dependable' of British tennis, having reached at least the third round in 15 of the past 20 majors. The 30-year-old has been the man left carrying the flag at 14 Grand Slams over the past five years, including the Australian Open in January.

But the season-opening Grand Slam tournament was the second successive major where a British singles player failed to reach the second week. Norrie reached the French Open fourth round last year and, given his pedigree and ranking, represented the obvious bet to end that unwanted run in Paris. "We'll see how we can get myself ready to play and give it everything on Tuesday.

If not, it's not the end of the world," he added. If Norrie is seriously hampered by the issue, it would be a further blow to British singles hope at the French Open. Jack Draper, who replaced Norrie as British number one in 2024, has been ruled out with a knee injury.

It is the latest in a long line of fitness struggles for Draper, who had only just returned from almost six months out with bone bruising in his serving arm. Sonay Kartal, who cracked the top 50 last year, has missed the entire clay-court swing because of a back injury suffered during her run to the Indian Wells fourth round. Norrie is one of six British players in the French Open singles main draws - and most have been hampered by injury this year.