ruud rg

Casper Ruud’s Roland Garros dream came to a shocking end on Wednesday, the No. 7 seed looking visibly hampered by injury en route to a 2-6, 6-4, 6-1, 6-0 second-round defeat to Nuno Borges.

"For the last couple of weeks I've been kind of struggling a little bit with knee pain on and off," Rudd confirmed in his post-match press conference. "That's why I decided to pull out of Geneva after Rome, do my best, and heal to be ready here."

The two-time finalist came to Paris having captured his first Masters 1000 title at the Mutua Madrid Open and won his first round in straight sets against Spanish qualifier Albert Ramos Viñolas. But the pre-tournament favorite struggled to move as Borges rallied from a set down and took a medical timeout before losing a 6-0 fourth set on Court Suzanne-Lenglen.

"When you're practicing, leading up to the tournament, it's easier to avoid certain movements that are painful," Ruud explained. "It's not painful. Everything is not painful. But certain movements out there are kind of what makes it painful. Certain shots are painful to do.

"When you're playing matches, you can't really control it in the same way. You do everything you can to get to every ball. Sometimes you kind of forget that this is a shot I shouldn't go for maybe in terms of pain in the knee. That's pretty much all. It's been okay in practice because, like I said, I'm able to control it a bit more. When you play a match, you go full on, no matter what happens. I don't want to take anything away from Nuno, because I think he played a phenomenal match, a really high level.

"A few shots out there are a bit painful for me to do. Other than that, it's kind of everything, it's not more than this."

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Is in-form Casper Ruud playing his best-ever tennis? 'I still feel like there's more to bring'

Ruud reached the semifinals of last year’s Roland Garros but was hindered by symptoms of food poisoning that was later revealed to stem from parasite.

"It's been feeling pretty good. But then today, when you're playing a match, you're playing a slam, you go for everything and you kind of forget about all this stuff. I felt it immediately on the first one. It kind of came back. It didn't get any better. But I'm able to hit other shots and other movements. It's okay. But it's just kind of a bad feeling that it doesn't go away.

"Of course, I think the first two sets was great level. I played well in the first and also in the second. But Nuno also played really well. Towards the third and fourth, it was not getting better. I tried to take more antiinflammatory pills, but it didn't seem to really help very much."

Borges becomes the first Portuguese man to reach the third round of Roland Garros, and will play Alexei Popyrin for a chance to reach the second week.