Britain’s
former number one
Tim Henman has highlighted what
Emma Raducanu must do to get
the better of Poland’s
Iga Swiatek at the
French Open. The two are set to face
off in the round of 64 of the second Grand Slam of the year on Wednesday.
Raducanu
cemented her spot in the second round after beating China’s Wang Xinyu with a
score of 7-5, 4-6, 6-3. On the other hand, the defending champion got the better
of Slovakia’s Rebecca Sramkova in the round of 128 in straight sets with a score
of 6-3, 6-3. It will be the fifth meeting between the two players in professional
tennis. In the previous four meetings, Swiatek had a clear edge as she won on
all four occasions.
Britain’s
former number one Henman has spoken to
TNT Sports, where he highlighted that
Raducanu must use an ‘aggressive’ approach if she wants to get the better of
the four-time French Open winner in the second round. The 50-year-old also
stated that it is important for the 2021 US Open winner to rest properly after
a tough outing in the first match of the competition against China’s Wang. Henman was also of the opinion that playing against a player of Swiatek’s calibre would ease some pressure off Raducanu.
"Against
Swiatek, there is less pressure on her and hopefully she can play with that
freedom,” said Henman. “To come through a match like that, the recovery and
rest is going to be important. Tomorrow she can make sure that she does all the
right things with the recovery work, and perhaps some light practice because,
as she said, she played a lot of tennis and her game is in good shape. It’s
important she goes in with a full tank of energy if she’s going to cause an
upset against Swiatek. She's got to be very aggressive. That’s not easy to do
on a clay court when it's slow and heavy, and a little bit cold. But she's just
building confidence because she's coming into the biggest and best events on
clay, which is not her natural surface, and she's got the win. And now again,
she gets the opportunity to see where her game's at against one of the best
clay-court players in the world."