Emma Raducanu ‘didn’t know if she was going to be ready’ for Indian Wells

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Emma Raducanu is set to resume her season at the Indian Wells Open this Thursday, nearly skipping the U.S. trip after a chilling stalker episode rocked her world.

The 2021 US Open champ hasn’t played a WTA match since mid-February, when she sobbed courtside during her second-round loss to Karolina Muchova in Dubai. The trouble brewed pre-match when a stranger approached her in public, then reappeared in the stands as the game began.

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After two games, a shaken Raducanu approached the chair umpire, retreating behind the official’s seat to dab away tears. The WTA later confirmed a man showing “fixated behaviour” was ejected, and Dubai authorities slapped him with a restraining order and a tournament ban days later. He’d also left her a note, snapped her photo, and acted in ways that rattled her.

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Raducanu hunkered down at home with her parents for weeks, wrestling with whether to join the WTA 1000 in Indian Wells. She made a last-second call last Wednesday, jetting to California the next day. “After Dubai, a lot hit me—I needed time,” she said. “But Indian Wells, my favorite event, pulled me back. I couldn’t stay away.”

Beefed-up security tipped the scales for her return, though she flagged a lingering “weak spot” with public info. “Security’s huge,” she told The Athletic. “Player hotels being common knowledge isn’t ideal—anyone can stroll in. It’s a gap, but I manage. I’m hyper-aware now, never solo.”

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This isn’t her first stalker scare—post-2021 US Open, a man hit her home with notes and “gifts,” spurring a 2022 restraining order. That left scars; this latest brush has her on edge. “I barely went out,” the world No. 55 shared. “I wasn’t sure I’d be ready—playing unprepared was the last thing I wanted.”

She reflected, “In Dubai, alone in a foreign place, I felt exposed. It’d been simmering for a while—tough to shake.”

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