Wimbledon semi-finals without him ?: Pain-stricken Nadal doesn't want to be a liar

Rafael Nadal fights his way to the semi-finals of Wimbledon in a real crime thriller.

Wimbledon semi-finals without him ?: Pain-stricken Nadal doesn't want to be a liar

Rafael Nadal fights his way to the semi-finals of Wimbledon in a real crime thriller. There it should go against the Australian bully professional Nick Kyrgios. But after his marathon match in the quarterfinals, the tennis legend is not at all sure whether he can compete. He says he doesn't want to lie.

Rafael Nadal only wants to make a decision about participating in the Wimbledon semi-finals after examinations for a muscle injury in the abdominal area. "There is something more important than winning Wimbledon, that is health. Let's see how it develops," said the 36-year-old Spaniard after his quarter-final victory in a five-set crime thriller against US professional Taylor Fritz and announced medical tests on.

The 22-time Grand Slam tournament winner had his symptoms treated in the second set on Wednesday and received anti-inflammatory drugs and painkillers from a doctor, as he himself reported. During the game, his father and sister signaled him to resign. "It's something I hate. That's why I tried to keep going," Nadal said.

With 4: 6, 7: 5, 3: 6, 7: 5, 7: 6 (10: 4) he defeated Fritz in 4:21 hours and kept the chance of a dream final against defending champion Novak Djokovic from Serbia . After triumphing at the Australian Open and French Open, Nadal still has the opportunity to win the Grand Slam, winning all four major tournaments in a year. He will now meet Australian Nick Kyrgios on Friday, who reached his first Wimbledon semi-final by beating Cristian Garin from Chile 6: 4, 6: 3, 7: 6 (7: 5).

He couldn't give a clear answer if he would play, Nadal said. If he said this and then something else came up, "then I would be a liar".

Before the start of the tournament, the Spaniard reported that the chronic pain in his left foot had been relieved with a special therapy. In Barcelona, ​​Nadal had undergone pulsed radiofrequency therapy. The affected foot nerves are numbed with this treatment and can no longer transmit the pain stimulus to the brain. Nadal has been suffering from Müller-Weiss Syndrome, a rare and degenerative disease, for several years.