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Rafael Nadal in action during his quarter-final match against Jordan Thompson at the Brisbane International.
Rafael Nadal in action during his quarter-final match against Jordan Thompson at the Brisbane International. Photograph: Jono Searle/EPA
Rafael Nadal in action during his quarter-final match against Jordan Thompson at the Brisbane International. Photograph: Jono Searle/EPA

Nadal loses three match points and has medical break before Brisbane exit

This article is more than 4 months old
  • Spaniard was assessed by trainer for upper left leg problem
  • ‘I hope it is not important and will be practising next week’

Rafael Nadal is keeping his fingers crossed he will be able to play in the Australian Open after needing medical treatment during a gruelling loss to Jordan Thompson at his comeback tournament.

Nadal looked poised to claim another straight-sets win at the Brisbane International when he brought up a first match point in the 10th game of the second set but missed a backhand overhead.

Two more chances followed in the tie-break but Nadal was unable to take either and his Australian opponent fought back to claim a 5-7, 7-6, (6) 6-3 victory after three hours and 25 minutes.

More concerning was the off-court medical time-out Nadal took at 1-4 in the deciding set, although he was able to continue without too much apparent discomfort. The 37-year-old had surgery on the psoas tendon in his left hip in June after being sidelined since suffering an injury at last January’s Australian Open and revealed the latest problem is in the same area.

“I feel the muscle tired,” he said. “I mean, for sure it’s not the same like last year at all because when it happened I felt something drastic immediately. Today I didn’t feel anything. The only problem is because the place is the same, you are a little bit more scared than usual.

“I need to see how I wake up tomorrow morning. We have been talking these last days, talking about the positive things. That’s why I am not over-positive when I have been talking.

“I have been talking with a lot of precaution because I know after a year is difficult for the body to be playing tournaments at the highest level. When the things are becoming more difficult, you don’t know how your body is going to react.

“I hope it is not important and I hope to have the chance to be practising next week and to play Melbourne. Honestly, I am not 10 sure of anything now.”

Thompson will take on the second seed, Grigor Dimitrov, in the semi-finals, while the top seed, Holger Rune, faces the Russian Roman Safiullin.

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