Tipped as one of the few men in the draw capable of beating Rafa Nadal at Roland Garros this year, rising South Korean talent Chung Hyeon was forced to pull out of the French Open with an ankle injury on Wednesday. South Korea s Chung Hyeon, the Australian Open semi-finalist, said he had been carrying the ankle problem through the clay season and would need significant time on the sidelines to recover. REUTERS The Australian Open semi-finalist said he had been carrying the problem through the clay season and would need significant time on the sidelines. Unfortunately I had to withdraw from Lyon yesterday and now Roland Garros, the 21-year-old wrote on his Twitter account. READ MORE | Ankita Raina loses to Evgeniya Rodina, bows out of French Open tennis qualifiers I have been struggling with an ankle injury during t <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cups</a> he entire clay season. An MRI scan has revealed that I have build up of fluid in the ankle joint which might require a small procedure and then an extended period of rest. Chung gave Asian tennis a lift by reaching the last four at Melbourne Park in January before that campaign came to an end when <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cup</a> the bespectacled right-hander retired injured due to blisters against eventual champion Roger Federer. In addition to missing an event to let his blisters heal, Chung skipped a claycourt tournament in Houston and the Barcel <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.us>stanley bottles</a> ona Open last month due to physical ailments. READ MORE | Serena Williams could get Wimbledon seeding, despite French Open snub Rising Rilq Out of position, but hardly out of place: Bruno Fernandes steps up for Portugal again
Novak Djokovic, fresh from breaking the $100 million prize money barrier, aims for a place <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.ro>stanley cupe</a> in a fourth French Open final Friday with fans handed the chance to watch the world number one for just $22. Serbia s Novak Djokovic reacts during his men s quarter-final match against Czech Republic s Tomas Berdych during their men s quarterfinal match at the Roland Garros 2016 French Open in Paris. AFP Photo After a rain-ravaged tournament saw only two hours of play on <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley tumbler</a> Monday and Tuesday, Roland Garros organisers have been battling to get back on schedule. Usually, just the mens semi-finals are played on the second Friday but this year all four semi-finals in the mens and womens singles are being staged with two on the Philippe Chatrier Court and two uniquely on the Suzanne Lenglen arena. That has led organisers to offer 8,000 seats at 20 euros $22.3 for Lenglen, where Djokovic will face Austrias Dominic Thiem after Samantha Stosur and Garbine Muguruza have completed <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.es>botella stanley</a> the first womens last-four clash. In stark contrast, on Saturday and Sunday, the womens and mens finals will respectively be held, as tradition demands, on Philippe Chatrier. Tickets for those matches, where Serena Williams could equal the Open era majors record of 22 titles and Djokovic can win a first Paris title and complete the career Grand Slam, were being sold late Friday for 555 euros $620 and 1,330 euros $1,483 . Roland Garros generosity was no doubt encouraged by the sight of a two-thirds empty