Tennis

Osaka out of WTA Finals with injured right shoulder

Naomi Osaka withdrew from the WTA Finals on Tuesday with a right shoulder injury. The two-time Grand Slam champion had been scheduled to play top-ranked Ash Barty at the season-ending tournament.

'This is not how I wanted to end this tournament or my season,' says Japanese star

Naomi Osaka said the injury surfaced in Beijing this month. (Andy Wong/Associated Press)

Naomi Osaka withdrew from the WTA Finals on Tuesday with a right shoulder injury.

The two-time Grand Slam champion had been scheduled to play top-ranked Ash Barty at the season-ending tournament.

"I'm disappointed to have to withdraw from the finals," Osaka said in a statement. "This is not how I wanted to end this tournament or my season but I look forward to getting healthy and hope to be back here next year."

Alternate Kiki Bertens took Osaka's place against Barty and pulled off the upset by scores of 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.

As an alternate, Bertens is eligible to advance to the semifinals, which is determined by match wins.

Osaka opened the tournament by beating Petra Kvitova 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-4 in the Red Group. Barty also won her first match, beating Belinda Bencic 5-7, 6-1, 6-2.

Osaka said the injury surfaced in Beijing this month. She won tournaments in Osaka, Japan, and Beijing heading into the WTA Finals.

"Actually I did this in the finals of Beijing," she said at a news conference. "I didn't serve for a while when I was in Japan. I just started serving the last two days. Felt better, came here, then I played my match.

"I felt it immediately [while playing Kvitova]. When I woke up the day after, it was like throbbing and stuff. Yeah, didn't serve at all yesterday. Hit for like five minutes."

Osaka's WTA Finals debut in Singapore last year also ended on a low note with a 0-3 record in round-robin matches. She retired with an injury against Bertens in her third match after losing the first set.

"This is the second time I had to withdraw from the Finals," Osaka said. "The last time I at least played, so a retirement instead of a withdrawal.

"I thought I was playing well. I definitely wanted to win here."