Raducanu's Wimbledon hopes hang on 48 hours as injury clouds Queen's breakthrough
The 2021 US Open champion skipped practice on Thursday and was spotted in a protective boot the day before. The draw opens in 48 hours.

Emma Raducanu did not take to a practice court at the All England Club on Thursday, 25 June 2026, leaving her participation at Wimbledon — which begins on Monday — in genuine doubt. The 23-year-old, who reached the final of the HSBC Championships at Queen's Club at the weekend, was seen in a protective boot on Wednesday, and the decision to skip training the following day hardened concern that the body that carried her to a surprise run in west London will not last two more weeks in south-west London.
Raducanu's recent form is the most encouraging stretch of her career since the 2021 US Open. Reaching the Queen's final, on a grass surface she had previously struggled to read, suggested the British No. 1 had begun to convert talent into week-to-week results. The same surface-switch that exposed her movement in 2022 — when a recurrence of the wrist injury she first suffered at the BJK Cup in Istanbul — now threatens to derail the most winnable major on her calendar. The structural story is familiar: a player whose ranking has yo-yoed between the low 40s and outside the top 200 because her body, not her racket, sets the ceiling.
A 48-hour window
The information available to the public is thin. The BBC's report on 25 June at 15:24 UTC confirmed only that Raducanu had not trained; details of the injury — location, severity, prognosis — were not disclosed. The Daily Sport's earlier item, timed at 14:24 UTC the same day, added the detail of the protective boot, but no medical framing.
That leaves a narrow decision window. The Championships accept late withdrawals until shortly before the draw; medical time-outs during matches are allowed but offer limited cover for a player whose game depends on first-step explosiveness. Should she withdraw, Britain's contingent at a home Slam shrinks overnight — and with it a women's draw that, on form, finally gave British fans a seed to track from round one.
The picture will clarify, one way or the other, by Saturday. Either Raducanu declares herself fit and resumes court time, or she pulls out and frees up a qualifying-loser replacement. As of Thursday evening, neither had happened.
What the recent run told us
Raducanu's Queen's run mattered less for the silverware she did not lift than for what it demonstrated about the gap between her ceiling and her ranking. Three straight wins on grass — a surface that punishes the deep, defensive retrieval she sometimes defaults to on hard courts — implied a tactical adjustment rather than a temporary spike. Her movement looked lighter; her forehand, the shot that abandoned her through most of 2023 and 2024, was again finding the line under pressure.
That progress is precisely what makes the boot on Wednesday so costly. A player rebuilding after years of ranking churn needs match rhythm more than ranking points; Wimbledon would have offered five rounds of grass-court reps and roughly £1m in minimum prize money before the second week. The injury pulls both forward.
The counter-read is straightforward: better to forfeit one Slam than to compound a soft-tissue problem into a season-ending one. Several British players of the modern era — Andy Murray chief among them — have learned that lesson the hard way. The argument for playing is romantic; the argument for stopping is clinical.
The structural frame
British No. 1s at Wimbledon carry an unusual load. The home tournament is the only major where a British player walks into the press room knowing the room is full regardless of the prior week's results. Raducanu has not held that role in five years; in 2021, at 18, she played every match at the All England Club as if the cameras were a distant murmur. She no longer has that luxury.
The economic layer sits underneath. Raducanu's brand portfolio is large and exposed: she is, by some distance, the most commercially bankable British women's tennis player of her generation. Every tournament appearance feeds that valuation; every missed major erodes it slightly. The pressure to compete, even at 80%, is therefore not purely sporting.
Stakes
If Raducanu plays and loses early, the narrative reads as another false dawn — a gifted player whose body cannot string four healthy weeks together. If she withdraws and returns healthy in time for the North American hard-court swing, the same fortnight becomes a footnote. The deciding variable is medical, not tactical, and it is being decided without public input.
Wimbledon begins on Monday, 29 June 2026. The draw is held on Friday. By Saturday, the field — and British tennis's hopes for the fortnight — will be set.
Desk note: Monexus is reporting this story in the narrow form the sources support — a confirmed absence from practice and a visible protective boot, with the surrounding context drawn from Raducanu's documented recent results. No medical diagnosis has been disclosed by Raducanu or her team, and we have not speculated on one.