Emma Raducanu arrived in Rome with a sense of cautious optimism. She had been practicing at the Foro Italico for days, appeared physically present, and sat in front of the media to speak about her virus-fighting comeback since February. Then minutes later, she withdrew. 

British No. 1 has announced that she is withdrawing from the Italian Open due to post-viral syndrome, thus making it the fourth tournament she has failed to compete in a row. The timing of it made the news hit harder than it might have otherwise. She said at the press conference that she had “turned a corner” in her recovery, and her withdrawal was announced shortly after. 

Raducanu’s last competitive match was in early March at Indian Wells, where she lost in the third round to Amanda Anisimova. She has since been in Toronto, Linz, Madrid, and now Rome. She’d been granted a bye into the second round here and had a genuine opportunity to get competitive minutes on clay before Roland Garros, and that window has now closed. 

The origins of the illness trace back to a virus she picked up at the start of the Transylvania Open in Cluj in February. “I picked up like a virus, I think, at the start of the tournament,” she said at the time. “So I was dealing with that and the after-effects. I had really long effects for the last three weeks. I’ve been trying to clear them.” What followed were weeks of the same story: practicing, showing signs of improvement, and then being forced to pull out again.

Emma Raducanu practices with coach Mark Petchey, French Open Tennis, Friday Previews, Qualifying and Practice, Tennis, Roland Garros, Paris, France – 23 May 2025 EDITORIAL USE ONLY No use with unauthorised audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or live services. Online in-match use is limited to 120 images, no video emulation. No use in betting, games, or single club/league/player publications. PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxHUNxGRExMLTxCYPxROUxBULxUAExKSAxONLY Copyright: xJavierxGarcia/Shutterstockx 15314610ca

The ranking implications are significant. By not competing in Rome, Raducanu fails to defend the 120 points she earned here last year when she reached the fourth round, and will drop to No. 37 in the live rankings, likely ending her chances of being seeded at Roland Garros. She had risen to the 30th world rank after getting her stride back after a 2025 season that saw her emerge into the top 30 and earn seeded positions at the Slams. It’s a tough situation to have to play all that tennis without a single clay court game to prove it, in the middle of a spring swing. 

Former British No. 1 Greg Rusedski had been vocal about what he felt Raducanu needed to do. “Emma needs to get back on court,” he said. “You can’t just say, okay, let’s give up clay and let’s just get onto the grass courts. I think you’ve got to get the balance. The first thing is to get healthy. Get rid of this virus, get to your nutritionist, get your diet right, get your vitamin intake, what you need to get rid of this virus. Because it’s such a shame she hasn’t been able to play it.”

Emma Raducanu’s French Open participation in doubt

The last two clay tournaments for Emma Raducanu before Roland Garros are the Internationaux de Strasbourg from May 17 to 23 and the Rabat Grand Prix from May 18 to 23. Last year, she journeyed along the Strasbourg trail, securing a victory against Daria Kasatkina and then losing to Danielle Collins. It’s not known if she will be physically ready to do the same this season. 

The 23-year-old will arrive at Roland Garros, if she plays, with a clean slate of the red-dirt seasons, i.e., more than two months without competitive tennis of any kind. This is a big disadvantage at a tournament where the preparation of the clay is as important as anywhere on the tour. Being unseeded and cold at a Slam where she could have been easily seeded is not a situation in which Raducanu wanted to find herself when heading into the Grand Slam month. 

The top 20 WTA players will all play in Rome, where Jasmine Paolini hopes to retain the title she won 12 months ago. The draw Raducanu was supposed to be in goes on without her. It’s the tale of her 2026 season thus far, marked by a list of tournament question marks, a ranking that continues to drop, and an illness that still hasn’t fully let go. It’s never been a lack of talent. That doesn’t often happen with Raducanu. It is the time she spends on court, long enough for that talent to be showcased, but that keeps eluding her.