Tennis can be unspeakably cruel. Matteo Berrettini experienced that cruelty firsthand on Wednesday at Court Philippe-Chatrier, forced to retire against compatriot Matteo Arnaldi while trailing 5-7, 2-5 in the Roland-Garros quarterfinals.
The pain first appeared mid-way through the opening set, on a serve motion. "I started to feel something when I was serving," he explained in his post-match press conference. "The more I played, the worse I felt." A medical timeout revealed significant inflammation in his left hip, and the Italian realized the battle was already lost.
What makes this scene so heartbreaking is the pattern. Berrettini, 30, has suffered injuries to his wrist, abdominals, foot, and right hip throughout his career. Each time, he fought his way back. Each time, his body betrayed him again. "I'm tired of retiring," he said, his eyes red. "I'm the last one that wants to leave the court like this."
The timing compounds the cruelty. Berrettini was enjoying his best run in Paris in years. After enduring what he described as "darkness" brought on by his injury struggles, he had rediscovered his smile by reaching the quarterfinals with gutsy, hard-fought victories. Everything finally seemed to be falling into place.
"I'm proud of the way I fought through this tournament," he insisted, clinging to something positive amid the wreckage. But his voice trembled, and pride could not mask the anxiety. Wimbledon, his favorite tournament, starts in three weeks. "I don't know how long it'll keep me out. In my head, there was the thought of not wanting to be out three months. I hope I stopped in time."
On the other side of the net, Arnaldi had the grace not to celebrate. The Italian, ranked outside the top 100, found himself thrust into a Grand Slam semifinal for the first time, a moment of joy tempered by his compatriot's pain.
The left hip injury is distinct from the right hip trouble that plagued him in 2019 and 2020. A new problem, in a body that keeps accumulating scars. "It took away the chance to perform until the last point," Berrettini summarized, his voice cracking.
Berrettini's Roland-Garros 2026 story will be remembered as an unfinished comeback. That of a champion who refuses to give in but whose body no longer cooperates. Tennis owes him at least this: to remember his bravery as much as his retirements.

