“He knows the end is near,” Brian Anderson said on TNT's Roland Garros broadcast.
“He’s managing the pain; he’s in tennis’s version of hospice,” Anderson’s booth-mate, Jim Courier, agreed. “He’s just kinda riding this thing to the end.”
At the time, those comments about Juan Manuel Cerundolo seemed entirely appropriate. The 56th-ranked Argentine trailed top seed Jannik Sinner 6-3, 6-2, 4-1. There was an air of quiet inevitability in Court Philippe Chatrier. Cerundolo looked at his player box and threw his hands in the air, pleading for help. Sinner missed a shot and casually flipped his racquet around in his hand, as if he didn’t have a care in the world. The worries about playing on a hot day seemed to be well behind him.
Then something happened. Something tiny, but terrible.
Sinner stopped and pulled his lower right leg up. Then he started talking to his team. “I just need a moment,” he said, according to Mary Jo Fernandez on the sideline.

