Raducanu Overcomes Fear of Needles to Manage Back Injury Ahead of French Open

FILED - 19 April 2024, Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart: British tennis player Emma Raducanu in action against Poland's Iga Swiatek Women's singles quarterfinals match at the WTA Tour tennis tournament in Stuttgart. Photo: Marijan Murat/dpa
FILED - 19 April 2024, Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart: British tennis player Emma Raducanu in action against Poland's Iga Swiatek Women's singles quarterfinals match at the WTA Tour tennis tournament in Stuttgart. Photo: Marijan Murat/dpa
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Raducanu Overcomes Fear of Needles to Manage Back Injury Ahead of French Open

FILED - 19 April 2024, Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart: British tennis player Emma Raducanu in action against Poland's Iga Swiatek Women's singles quarterfinals match at the WTA Tour tennis tournament in Stuttgart. Photo: Marijan Murat/dpa
FILED - 19 April 2024, Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart: British tennis player Emma Raducanu in action against Poland's Iga Swiatek Women's singles quarterfinals match at the WTA Tour tennis tournament in Stuttgart. Photo: Marijan Murat/dpa

Former US Open champion Emma Raducanu has overcome her phobia of needles in a bid to relieve a back injury ahead of her first round match against China's Wang Xinyu at the French Open on Monday.

The 22-year-old suffered a back spasm at the Strasbourg Grand Prix earlier this week, and had faced a similar problem before this year's Australian Open, Reuters reported. Raducanu said dry needling and heat therapy have helped relieve it.

The Briton reached the second round in her last Roland Garros appearance three years ago, before undergoing wrist and ankle surgeries in 2023. She has steadily climbed back into the world's top 50 after slipping out of the top 300 last year.

"It feels OK, it feels good, not 100% yet, but we're working towards that. I still have a couple of days," Raducanu told BBC Sport. "I would say the one before Australia was worse. I feel like this one I kind of caught before it fully locked up.

"At the start of the year I was so scared of needles. It was my biggest phobia... Since then, I've been kind of dipping my toes into it because I know it helps even though I'm really scared of them. That's how I've kind of been trying to manage it."

During the claycourt season, Raducanu reached the last 16 of the Italian Open, where she lost to eventual runner-up Coco Gauff. She fell in the second round of the Madrid Open to Ukrainian Marta Kostyuk.



Japan’s King Kazu Wants More After First Appearance of 40th Season 

Paris St Germain's Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe talk with Kazuyoshi Miura, Japanese soccer legend and Japan Football League club Suzuka Point Getters player, during a news conference upon their team's arrival in Tokyo for their team's tour of Japan in Tokyo, Japan July 17, 2022. (Reuters)
Paris St Germain's Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe talk with Kazuyoshi Miura, Japanese soccer legend and Japan Football League club Suzuka Point Getters player, during a news conference upon their team's arrival in Tokyo for their team's tour of Japan in Tokyo, Japan July 17, 2022. (Reuters)
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Japan’s King Kazu Wants More After First Appearance of 40th Season 

Paris St Germain's Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe talk with Kazuyoshi Miura, Japanese soccer legend and Japan Football League club Suzuka Point Getters player, during a news conference upon their team's arrival in Tokyo for their team's tour of Japan in Tokyo, Japan July 17, 2022. (Reuters)
Paris St Germain's Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe talk with Kazuyoshi Miura, Japanese soccer legend and Japan Football League club Suzuka Point Getters player, during a news conference upon their team's arrival in Tokyo for their team's tour of Japan in Tokyo, Japan July 17, 2022. (Reuters)

Japan's Kazuyoshi "King Kazu" Miura made his first appearance of his 40th season as a professional footballer at the weekend and shows no sign of wanting to hang up his boots any time soon.

The former international forward, who turned 58 in February, came on as a late substitute in Atletico Suzuka's 2-1 win over YSCC Yokohama in the fourth tier of the Japanese pyramid on Sunday.

The popular striker signed an 18-month loan deal with Suzuka last June but a leg injury sustained in January had kept him on the sidelines from the start of this Japan Football League season.

"I hope to play again showing my character," Miura told Kyodo news agency after the match.

"I managed to play thanks to the support from everyone. I'm looking to stepping up a gear from here."

Miura made his first two appearances for Santos in the 1986 Brazilian Championship, having headed alone to South America to pursue his football dream as a 15-year-old.

He returned to Japan as an established international to join Verdy Kawasaki and helped them win the first two J.League titles in 1993 and 1994. He scored 55 goals in 89 appearances for Japan, the last of which came in 2000.

Miura, whose long club career has also included spells in Italy, Croatia, Australia and Portugal, still has a way to go to match Egyptian Ezzeldin Bahader's record of turning out for a professional team at the age of 74.

Given his commitment to the game, however, it might be foolish to write him off.

"When I was around 35 or 40, I did start saying to myself, 'I can't keep playing this way'," he told FIFA.com in April.

"Rather than giving any thought to quitting, it was more about pushing myself to give more. It's not so much that the word 'retire' isn't in my vocabulary, but more that I've never felt any desire to do it."