Tennis

Knee injury puts Naomi Osaka's U.S. Open in doubt

Naomi Osaka felt a strange sensation in her left knee, different than anything she'd experienced. The U.S. Open champion left the court worried about whether she'll be in shape to defend her precious title.

Ash Barty on track for No. 1 ranking after reaching semifinals in Cincinnati

Trainers examine Naomi Osaka after she suffered a knee injury in her match against Sofia Kenin in the quarter-finals of the Western & Southern Open on Friday. Osaka withdrew from the match. (The Associated Press)

Naomi Osaka felt a strange sensation in her left knee, different than anything she'd experienced. The U.S. Open champion left the court worried about whether she'll be in shape to defend her precious title.

Osaka retired from her quarterfinal match at the Western & Southern Open on Friday, unsure what's going on in the knee. She expected to get an MRI.

For now, the player currently ranked No. 1 in the world is concerned about her chances of making another deep run in New York.

"Last year, I won the U.S. Open," she said. "This year, I'm trying to play the U.S. Open."

The problem came out of the blue.

Osaka split two sets with Sofia Kenin. She felt something unusual in the knee while serving early in the third set. After a timeout to have it examined and wrapped, she played a couple more points before retiring .

"I have no idea what's going on," she said.

With that, Kenin advanced to the semifinals for the second straight week. During her run to the semifinals in Toronto, she knocked off then-No. 1 Ashleigh Barty, an upset that allowed Osaka to move up to the top ranking. She'll face Madison Keys, who beat Venus Williams 6-2, 6-3 to reach the semifinals for the first time.

Ashleigh Barty of Australia returns a shot to Maria Sakkari during their quarter-final match at the Western and Southern Open in Mason, Ohio, on Friday. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)

Barty is in position to snatch it back heading into the Open. She beat Maria Sakkari 5-7, 6-2, 6-0 with an encouraging all-around effort.

"Still not quite there, but we're getting better and better each match," the French Open champion said. "I think that's the beauty of being able to stay alive in the tournament is to give myself an opportunity to keep getting better. I think I'm still aiming to obviously do very well here, but the big picture is New York in 10 days' time."

She needs some work on those first sets, though.

Barty got ahead 5-2 in her opening set and got sloppy, letting it slip away. It was the second straight day that Barty rallied after dropping a first set. She fought off a match point during a three-set win over Anett Kontaveit on Thursday, showing poise that she'd need to draw upon again a day later.

"There is certainly no panic, where it gets to the stage where I'm kind of overwrought or can't think straight," she said. "I'm still able to, more times than not, have the ability to relax and kind of stay clear and come back to what works."

Barty will face Svetlana Kuznetsova, who reached her first semifinal of the season by beating third-seeded Karolina Pliskova 3-6, 7-6 (2), 6-3.

Kuznetsova is playing only her ninth event after missing the start of the season because of a knee injury. On a hot, humid afternoon, she got treatment for tightness in her upper right leg after the second set and twice again during the final one.

On the men's side, qualifier Yoshihito Nishioka withdrew because of illness, sending David Goffin into the semifinals. Nishioka had a good tournament showing, beating sixth-seeded Kei Nishikori — a player he called his hero — and Alex De Minaur to reach the quarter-finals.

Goffin will face Richard Gasquet, who advanced with a three-set victory over Roberto Bautista Agut. Gasquet had groin surgery in January and fell to No. 68 in the ATP rankings on July 29, his lowest in nine years. He's back in an ATP Masters 1000 semifinal for the first time since 2013 in Miami.

Seven-time champion Roger Federer was upset Thursday, leaving Novak Djokovic as the only high seed left in the bracket.

Murray to skip U.S. Open

Meanwhile, Scotsman Andy Murray accepted a wild-card invitation to next week's Winston-Salem Open to continue his singles comeback, but he has decided to skip the U.S. Open.

He told BBC Sport that he won't play doubles at the season's final Grand Slam event, which begins Aug. 26 in Flushing Meadows, N.Y.

"My goal is to get back playing at the level that I want to on the singles court, and I've decided that I need to focus all my energies on that right now," Murray told BBC Sport. "The U.S. Open, doubles and mixed, can be another couple of weeks that you are slowing things down."

Murray, a former world No. 1, made his return to singles Monday at the Western & Southern Open near Cincinnati, losing 6-4, 6-4 in the first round to Frenchman Richard Gasquet.

The Winston-Salem Open in North Carolina, which begins Sunday, is an ATP 250 tournament that most of the world's top 50 players skip in order to prepare for the U.S. Open.

"What I need now is matches. I want to get myself back on the singles court and keep testing myself. Winston-Salem is a perfect place for me to do that," Murray said.

Murray, 32, lost in the first round of the Australian Open in January before undergoing a hip resurfacing surgery that he hoped would ease the pain that had plagued him for the previous 20 months.

With files from Field Level Media