French tennis player
Ugo Humbert has complained that none of
his opponents are ready to train with him during the
French Open. The
26-year-old cemented his spot in the round of 64 at the Roland Garros after
beating Australia’s Christopher O'Connell in straight sets with a score of 7-5,
6-3, 7-6.
That win sets up his clash against Britain’s Jacob Fearnley
who cemented his spot in the second round of the competition after beating Switzerland’s
Stan Wawrinka in straight sets with a score of 7-6, 6-3, 6-2. Talking ahead of the
clash, which will take place on Thursday, Humbert complained that none of his
opponents are willing to train with him. The reason is that the 26-year-old broke
his finger earlier in the campaign, but he has decided to keep playing instead of withdrawing.
“Nobody wants to train with me anymore! As a left-hander,
it's already complicated, but with one finger missing, it's worse,” said
Humbert while talking to Quentin Moynet. “In Madrid, I hit all week with
sparring [partners]. Last week in Munich, I signed to train with Cerundolo. But
an hour before training, without telling me, he signed with another guy. It's
driving me crazy! As a result, I played for half an hour with my physio. It's
really a world of sharks. When I start playing, at the beginning, the pain is a
6, 7 out of 10, so it hurts and it bothers me. After 10, 15 minutes the pain
goes down.
He continued by saying: "After 45 minutes I feel practically no pain at all. But I really
need to get back into really get leaning into my backhand, because I have a
good backhand. I played for one month with a backhand where I was just trying
to push the ball. I have to really get used to that, and, you know, there is
obviously a bit of apprehension in my mind. Yeah, things are coming back
gradually, and I'm very happy.”