Tennis-Frenchman Fils out of Roland Garros due to hip pain

French hopes for a title at ​Roland Garros suffered a blow even before ​the year's second Grand Slam got ‌underway ​as world number 19 Arthur Fils withdrew on Saturday with pain because of a hip issue. The 21-year-old had marked himself as a contender ‌for the French Open title after lifting the Barcelona crown and making the Madrid semi-finals, though he retired from Rome this month while trailing Andrea Pellegrino in the second round.


Reuters | Updated: 23-05-2026 20:30 IST | Created: 23-05-2026 20:30 IST
Tennis-Frenchman Fils out of Roland Garros due to hip pain

French hopes for a title at ​Roland Garros suffered a blow even before ​the year's second Grand Slam got ‌underway ​as world number 19 Arthur Fils withdrew on Saturday with pain because of a hip issue.

The 21-year-old had marked himself as a contender ‌for the French Open title after lifting the Barcelona crown and making the Madrid semi-finals, though he retired from Rome this month while trailing Andrea Pellegrino in the second round. "In Rome I felt a ‌little bit like around the hip, you know, pain. It was bothering me a lot. I ‌didn't want to take any risk," Fils told reporters. He said exams he did later looked "pretty fine", but the pain persisted.

"I wasn't able to practice for the last two weeks. Actually, the practice today was my first points since ⁠two weeks ​in Rome," Fils said. "I'll ⁠not be fit 100% to play the tournament, and I'll not take any risk like I did last year. I ⁠don't want to be stupid."

Fils was due to face Stan Wawrinka in the opening round. The Frenchman's pullout follows ​a pattern of injuries stalling his progress. Last year, he pulled out from Roland Garros ⁠after the second round with a stress fracture in his lower back.

That issue all but wiped out the rest of Fils' ⁠season ​last year, with his brief return in Toronto in August proving to be premature and forcing another long period of rehabilitation. Since his return in February, Fils made deep runs at Doha, ⁠Indian Wells and Miami before going all the way in Barcelona, where he downed Andrey Rublev in ⁠the final to win ⁠his first title since his comeback.

Yannick Noah is the only Frenchman to win a Grand Slam in the professional era, claiming his home major in ‌1983. The French ‌Open begins on Sunday.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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