NEWS
Emma Raducanu among five Grand Slam champions dealt French Open wildcard snub
Emma Raducanu will likely have to drop down to play in the French Open qualifying draw next week if she wants to compete in the tournament after she was declined a main draw wildcard to the second grand slam tournament of the year, which begins on 26 May.
The French Tennis Federation (FFT) released its list of wildcards for the 2024 tournament on Tuesday, opting to reserve its wildcards solely for local French players and its reciprocal wildcard agreements with the Australia and French Open.
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Although currently ranked No 212 as she continues her comeback from an eight-month layoff following three surgeries last year, Raducanu has entered the tournament with her protected ranking of 103. She is currently four places outside the French Open main draw, meaning she needs four players ranked higher than her on the entry list to pull out before the qualifying draw is conducted at the end of this week.
Raducanu has not competed since losing in the opening round of the Madrid Open last month. Her clay court season had started extremely well, leading Great Britain to a significant win over France in the Billie Jean King Cup before reaching the quarter-finals of the Stuttgart Open.
After just two weeks of competition, though, Raducanu admitted that she was feeling fatigued following defeat to María Lourdes Carlé in Madrid. She has not competed since then; the Italian Open similarly chose to reserve its wildcards for local players and Raducanu has declined to drop down and compete in the WTA 125 events hosted in the second week of Madrid and Rome, which could have provided further opportunities to gain more matches, confidence and ranking points.
Raducanu had been scheduled to compete in the Strasbourg WTA 500 next week, during the French Open qualifying draw, but she withdrew shortly before the French Open announced its wildcard recipients, an indication that she still intends to play in Paris.
The French Tennis Federation’s decision to reserve its wildcards solely for local players and its reciprocal deals with other grand slam federations has consequences beyond Raducanu’s omission. With numerous high-profile comebacks and farewells, a number of prominent players will miss out.