Rafael Nadal is on the
final entry list for the Rio Olympics.
The 14-time major
champion hasn’t played since pulling out of the French Open because of an
injured left wrist and needed the International Tennis Federation’s Olympic
Committee to approve his appeal because he hasn’t played Davis Cup.
Nadal won the gold medal at the 2008
Beijing Games.
While there were no surprises on the
list released Friday by the ITF, Wimbledon runner-up Milos Raonic later
announced that he was pulling out of the Olympics. In a statement, the
seventh-ranked Canadian said that “I am making this decision for a variety of
health concerns including the uncertainty around the Zika virus.”
Still, unlike golf, nearly all the
world’s top tennis players plan to go to Rio next month.
The only other unexpected announcement
Friday came from sixth-ranked Victoria Azarenka, who posted on Twitter just as
the Olympic roster was about to be released that she is pregnant and will miss
the rest of the season. The two-time Grand Slam champion’s name was on the
ITF’s list.
A handful of top-30 men had pulled out
of the Rio Games; they mostly cited tennis reasons and not Zika. But the Big
Four of Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Roger Federer are all on the
list for both singles and doubles.
Murray is the reigning gold medalist,
while Djokovic and Federer are each seeking a first Olympic singles title.
Federer won silver in 2012 and Djokovic bronze in 2008.
Britain’s Murray is set to play doubles
with his older brother, Jamie, who won this year’s Australian Open title with
Brazil’s Bruno Soares. Federer will again team up with fifth-ranked Stan
Wawrinka for Switzerland _ they won gold together in 2008. Nadal is on the list
with Marc Lopez, who won this year’s French Open championship with fellow
Spaniard Feliciano Lopez, one of the top-30 men skipping Rio. Djokovic is on
the roster for Serbia with Nenad Zimonjic. The top singles players could later
choose to pull out of doubles.
Overall, 13 of the top 15 men in the
singles rankings are on the roster, with No. 9 Dominic Thiem the only other one
missing.
All of the top 20 women are on the list,
led by reigning gold medalist Serena Williams, who will also seek a fourth
Olympic doubles title with sister Venus. Five-time Grand Slam champion Maria
Sharapova will miss the Rio Games because of her doping suspension.
There will be 64 players in the singles
draws and 32 in doubles. Singles entries were based off the top 56 players in
the June 6 rankings, with other ways to qualify for the final eight spots.
Each country is allowed a maximum of
four singles players and two doubles teams for six players total on the men’s
and women’s sides. Sixteen mixed doubles teams will be determined in Rio from
players already in the Olympics.
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