The News
Thursday 07 of November 2024

Kvitová Won't Return for Six Months, Surgeon Says


Czech Republic's Petra Kvitova celebrates with the trophy after winning their final match of the Fed Cup tennis tournament against Russia in Prague, Czech Republic,photo: Reuters/David W Cerny
Czech Republic's Petra Kvitova celebrates with the trophy after winning their final match of the Fed Cup tennis tournament against Russia in Prague, Czech Republic,photo: Reuters/David W Cerny
Kvitova was injured on Tuesday when she fought off an intruder in her apartment in the Czech Republic

PRAGUE – Two-time Wimbledon tennis champion Petra Kvitová faces around six months out of the sport while her playing hand, wounded in a knife attack, recovers its strength, the surgeon who operated on her said on Wednesday.

Kvitova was injured on Tuesday when she fought off an intruder in her apartment in the Czech Republic.

“When we talk about [competitive] pressure on the hand, we are talking about a period of around six months [before that is possible],” Radek Kebrle said in a televised news conference.

“She is a young athlete, healthy … but it still is a relatively massive injury,” he said, adding that all the fingers on Kvitová’s left hand were hurt as she grabbed the attacker’s knife.

Her spokesman, Karel Tejkal, earlier described Tuesday’s near four-hour operation as a success and said Kvitová’s mood was optimistic.

But both he and the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) suggested her future in the sport was uncertain.

“There will be several weeks of waiting with a splint and then, gradually, slowly she will be able to put the hand to work,” Tejkal told Czech public television.

But any return to competitive tennis for the Czech world number 11 was “weeks and months” away, he said.

The WTA, said it regretted her absence from the circuit.

“It’s unclear if or when Kvitová will be back on the court, and the start of 2017 won’t be the same without her unique power and competitive spirit,” the association said on its website.

Aged 26, the hard-hitting left-hander rose to world number two in 2011 when she won the first of her two Wimbledon singles titles, and has been a mainstay of the top ten virtually ever since.

She slipped in the rankings this year but showed improved form in recent months, winning the Wuhan Open title in October and the season-ending WTA Elite trophy in November.

Czech police were still searching for her attacker, public television reported. Robert Muller

ROBERT MULLER