
Olympic champion Zheng withdraws from U.S. Open after elbow surgery
The world number six revealed last week on Instagram that she has been struggling with "persistent pain" in her right elbow, which affected her performance during both training and matches.
After exploring various treatments with little success, Zheng decided to undergo arthroscopic surgery following consultations with elbow specialists and her support team.
She has since announced she will be taking a short break from competition to focus on her recovery.
The 22-year-old Chinese star enjoyed a remarkable run last year, capturing gold at the Paris Olympics and reaching the final of the 2024 Australian Open.
However, her momentum was halted at Wimbledon this year, where she was eliminated in the first round by Czech player Katerina Siniakova earlier in July.
With Zheng's withdrawal, France's Leolia Jeanjean will move into the main draw of the U.S. Open, the final Grand Slam of the season, which begins with main draw action on August 24 in New York.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
‘Love is the key, right?' Evergreen Venus Williams plays on and on at 45
'Still haven't seen the Rolling Stones,' says Venus Williams, smiling, as she reminisced about her unforgettable professional tennis debut at the age of 14 in Oakland, California, an occasion that justified years of hype surrounding her stratospheric potential. Her first ever professional tennis match took place next door to a Rolling Stones concert. Now, 31 years later, at 45 years old, Williams is still here. Three weeks after returning to professional tennis for the first time in 16 months with a straight sets singles victory over the then world No 35 Peyton Stearns at the Citi Open in Washington, which marked her as the second-oldest woman in history to win a WTA Tour-level singles match and also silenced criticisms about her enduring presence on the tour, Williams now takes her comeback to the Cincinnati Open. Once one of the most precocious youngsters of her time, a US Open finalist by the age of 17, Williams continues to compete. She is one of the greatest tennis players of all time in her own right, a seven-time singles grand slam champion, Olympic gold medallist and former No 1 in singles. Despite all she has achieved, her enduring love for her sport means she continues to step on the practice court every day with the aim of being the best player she can be. 'Love is the key, right?' says Williams. 'If you don't love it, then get out of it. If you can, if you have that luxury, not everyone has that luxury. For me, I think a lot of the motivation for me is just to come back and try to play in the best health that I can. I never stopped hitting the ball, even when I was away, not as intensely as you would if you were playing tournaments, but I was still going out there. And I think that at the end of the day, you have to live your life on your own terms. Your terms should be yours. Doesn't matter what anyone else says or what anyone else thinks, if you get to live life on your own terms of life, [do] that. And I firmly believe in that.' This comeback, however, is not merely about striking a tennis ball. Last month, Williams revealed she has suffered with fibroids for years, non-cancerous tumours that develop in and around the uterus, which left her with excruciating symptoms including pelvic pain and heavy bleeding. In addition to the significant impact fibroids has had on Williams' everyday life, it also affected her tennis career. She says she had been misdiagnosed for years. Last week, in the aftermath of her returning in Washington, Williams posted a series of videos from exactly a year ago when she was undergoing an open myomectomy surgery to remove the fibroids and a large focal adenomyoma in her uterus, tissue from the lining of the uterus that had grown in her uterine wall: 'I was told I was inoperable,' she wrote. 'I was told I could bleed to death on the table. I was told to get a surrogate and forget the hope to carry my own children. I was misdiagnosed. I went untreated for years and years and years.' As she has returned to the court, Williams has used the publicity around her return to shine a light on women's medical issues. 'I just remember after my surgery, I was feeling so much gratitude but I was able to have the resources to finally get through that, and I remember that was the biggest feeling that I had. And at that point, I was nowhere near playing professional tennis, but now a year later, I'm in a completely different space, and I have a clean bill of health, thank God, and I'm ready to play and compete.' The next competitive challenge for Williams will be the 22-year-old world No 51 Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro. On the day Bouzas Maneiro was born, 24 September 2002, Williams had already won four grand slam singles titles, reached No 1 and contested the previous three consecutive major finals against her younger sister, Serena. The elder Williams sibling said the US swing was the focus for her return and she is unlikely to compete after the US Open. The rest is unknown. 'I'm very much in the moment,' she said. 'I don't think you should ever rule me out. That's all I can say.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: Record-breaking amount Emma Raducanu will bank if she regains her US Open title - with prize money having more than doubled since Brit's famous triumph in 2021
Emma Raducanu stands to earn a staggering $5million (£3.9m) if she lifts the US Open trophy for a second time next month – more than double the amount she pocketed during her fairytale run four years ago. The 22-year-old stunned the tennis world in 2021 by winning in New York as a qualifier, scooping $2.5m (£1.8m) in prize money in one of the sport's most remarkable breakthroughs. Now, with the prize pot having ballooned to record levels, tournament organisers have confirmed that this year's men's and women's singles champions will each receive $5m – the richest individual payday in Grand Slam history. The total player compensation package for the 2025 US Open has also hit an all-time high of $90m (£70m), up from $75m in 2024 and dwarfing the figure from Raducanu's winning year. That dramatic rise comes amid mounting pressure from top players for improved pay distribution across the tour. First-round losers in the main draw will now receive $110,000, while the champions in the men's, women's and mixed doubles events will each share $1m per title. Raducanu, Britain's top-ranked female player, is preparing for her return to Flushing Meadows with a new – and familiar – face in her corner. Earlier this week, Mail Sport revealed that she has appointed Rafael Nadal 's long-time coaching ally Francisco Roig to guide her through the US hard court swing. Roig served as a long-time member of Nadal's coaching team, working alongside Toni Nadal and later Carlos Moya during many of the Spaniard's 22 Grand Slam wins, before going on to work with Matteo Berrettini. His arrival marks Raducanu's eighth coaching partnership since turning professional. Discussions between the pair began during Wimbledon, and Roig is now in Cincinnati to help her prepare for the final WTA 1000 event before the last major of the year. After a stop-start few seasons plagued by injuries and instability, Raducanu will hope that a steady partnership with the experienced Spaniard – combined with a healthy run of form – can set the stage for another deep Grand Slam push. Should she go all the way again in New York, it won't just be silverware waiting at the end – it'll be the biggest cheque of her career.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Pawol to become first woman to umpire in regular-season MLB game
NEW YORK, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Jen Pawol is set to become the first woman to be an umpire in a regular-season Major League Baseball game this weekend, working for the Atlanta Braves' three-game series at home against the Miami Marlins beginning on Saturday. She will work the bases in both games of Saturday's doubleheader and will be stationed behind home plate on Sunday, MLB said. Pawol, who has umpired in the minors previously, was the first woman to umpire in a Spring Training game for 17 years during a meeting between the Houston Astros and Washington Nationals in 2024. The 48-year-old New Jersey native played college softball and has been a minor league umpire since 2016. The barrier-breaking news comes 10 years after the National Football League hired its first full-time female official, Sarah Thomas, who would go on to become the first woman to officiate a Super Bowl in 2021. The NBA was the first of the "big four" men's professional leagues in North America to add women to its full-time officiating staff, hiring Violet Palmer and Dee Kantner in 1997.