Bouchard to make comeback in Hobart
By our correspondents
December 03, 2015
SYDNEY: Canadian player Eugenie Bouchard will attempt to get her career back on track at the Hobart International, she said on Wednesday, after a head injury scuppered the end of her 2015 season.
The 21-year-old, named one of the most marketable athletes in the world this year, showed huge potential by making her first Grand Slam semi-final at the Australian Open in 2014.
She followed up that year by reaching the French Open semi-final and Wimbledon final, reaching a career-high world ranking of five in October 2014. But she suffered a big setback at the US Open in September when she sustained a head injury after slipping in the locker room.
She was forced to pull out of her fourth-round match at Flushing Meadows with concussion and remained troubled as she later withdrew from an event in Wuhan, China, and retired midway through a first-round match in Beijing with dizziness.
The Canadian did not contest another tour event this year and has slipped to 49 in the world. She has filed a lawsuit against the United States Tennis Association, claiming negligence.
“I want to start my 2016 season strongly and hope to get high-quality matches in Hobart,” she said in a statement ahead of the tournament starting on January 10, a lead-up event to the Australian Open in Melbourne the following week.
“The tournament is played on the same surface as the Australian Open and will help me prepare for Melbourne. I’ve had great success in Australia in the past and can’t wait to experience a new city,” she added.
The 21-year-old, named one of the most marketable athletes in the world this year, showed huge potential by making her first Grand Slam semi-final at the Australian Open in 2014.
She followed up that year by reaching the French Open semi-final and Wimbledon final, reaching a career-high world ranking of five in October 2014. But she suffered a big setback at the US Open in September when she sustained a head injury after slipping in the locker room.
She was forced to pull out of her fourth-round match at Flushing Meadows with concussion and remained troubled as she later withdrew from an event in Wuhan, China, and retired midway through a first-round match in Beijing with dizziness.
The Canadian did not contest another tour event this year and has slipped to 49 in the world. She has filed a lawsuit against the United States Tennis Association, claiming negligence.
“I want to start my 2016 season strongly and hope to get high-quality matches in Hobart,” she said in a statement ahead of the tournament starting on January 10, a lead-up event to the Australian Open in Melbourne the following week.
“The tournament is played on the same surface as the Australian Open and will help me prepare for Melbourne. I’ve had great success in Australia in the past and can’t wait to experience a new city,” she added.
-
Lana Del Rey Announces New Single Co-written With Husband Jeremy Dufrene -
Ukraine-Russia Talks Heat Up As Zelenskyy Warns Of US Pressure Before Elections -
Lil Nas X Spotted Buying Used Refrigerator After Backlash Over Nude Public Meltdown -
Caleb McLaughlin Shares His Resume For This Major Role -
King Charles Carries With ‘dignity’ As Andrew Lets Down -
Brooklyn Beckham Covers Up More Tattoos Linked To His Family Amid Rift -
Shamed Andrew Agreed To ‘go Quietly’ If King Protects Daughters -
Candace Cameron Bure Says She’s Supporting Lori Loughlin After Separation From Mossimo Giannulli -
Princess Beatrice, Eugenie Are ‘not Innocent’ In Epstein Drama -
Reese Witherspoon Goes 'boss' Mode On 'Legally Blonde' Prequel -
Chris Hemsworth And Elsa Pataky Open Up About Raising Their Three Children In Australia -
Record Set Straight On King Charles’ Reason For Financially Supporting Andrew And Not Harry -
Michael Douglas Breaks Silence On Jack Nicholson's Constant Teasing -
How Prince Edward Was ‘bullied’ By Brother Andrew Mountbatten Windsor -
'Kryptonite' Singer Brad Arnold Loses Battle With Cancer -
Gabourey Sidibe Gets Candid About Balancing Motherhood And Career