Fernando had a tough 4-6, 2-6, 3-6 loss against the number six seed Tomas Berdych. Fernando started off well, breaking Berdych at *2-1, but Berdych broke back immediately, and again when Fernando was serving to stay in the first set. Fernando had his foot re-bandaged during the changeover between the first two sets, and from then on, the match slipped out of his hands. He showed some patches of his old form, with some great play to save break points in the third set, but there wasn’t much he could do and his movement and speed were clearly hindered by his injury.
In his post-match presser, Fernando said that he had been dealing with a broken bone in his left ankle, a problem that had been detected after his match against Gael Monfils in Kooyong, and that the pain had come back during the first set of his match against Berdych today. After Kooyong, Fernando underwent some tests, including an MRI, which detected the broken bone. This isn’t the first foot related injury that Fernando’s dealt with. He had problems with his foot toward the end of his 2009 season, putting off the surgery because of his participation in the World Tour Finals and Davis Cup final, and he suffered recurring problems with blisters and minor pain all throughout 2010.
“The operating room is the last option. I have to talk to Dr. Angel Cotorro to see what decision I can make about the ankle, to see what I can do, whether to keep playing or stop to have the surgery to remove the broken bone, although this is a last resort, because I will miss several tournaments if I have the surgery.”
via AS.com
Fernando’s schedule in the next few weeks is completely full. He has the upcoming week and the week after the Australian Open off, but then he’s scheduled to play San Jose, Memphis, Acapulco, Davis Cup, Indian Wells and Miami, with no breaks between the tournaments unless he loses early in Indian Wells. Playing this much doesn’t seem very smart when dealing with a broken bone, especially if surgery is ruled out, so hopefully Fernando will ease back on his schedule and make his health the top priority.
On the positive side, despite struggling in his second round match and coming in to Melbourne not having won a full match since his first round match against Clement in Paris last November, Fernando successfully defended his points and remains in the top 10–he remains 9th in the rankings, although he could potentially drop to 10th if Melzer makes it to the semifinals or further.
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