Maria Sharapova’s specialist has denounced “understudy” adversaries of attempting to keep the Russian playing at one month from now’s French Open since it is their “last opportunity to win a Slam”. Sharapova, 30, is set to come back from a 15-month doping boycott at the Porsche Grand Prix in Stuttgart on Wednesday.
Her special case passage was called “rude” to different players by ex-world number one Caroline Wozniacki. Agnieszka Radwanska said Sharapova ought not be welcome to Grand Slams.
Sharapova plays Roberta Vinci of Italy in the first round in Stuttgart, and triumph over the world number 35 could set up a moment round tie with Radwanska, who faces Ekaterina Makarova.
Alluding to Radwanska and Wozniacki, Sharapova’s operator Max Eisenbud said the “cutting edge [is] passing them” and that they are “savvy to keep Maria out of Paris” in an announcement discharged to tennis writer Ben Rothenberg.
Neither Polish world number eight Radwanska, 28, nor 26-year-old Dane Wozniacki have won a Grand Slam title, however both have contended in Grand Slam finals.
Eisenbud included that if there was “no Serena [Williams], no Maria [Sharapova], no Victoria [Azarenka], no Petra [Kvitova]” at the French Open, it would be the “last shot” for “apprentice” players like Radwanska and Wozniacki to guarantee a Grand Slam.
Kvitova has said she has a “possibility” of making a stun return at the French Open one month from now as she recuperates from a profession undermining hand damage managed when she was cut by a gatecrasher in December.
Sharapova was given a two-year boycott a year ago, predated to 26 January 2016, in the wake of testing positive for coronary illness medicate meldonium at the Australian Open.
England’s Johanna Konta is in the other portion of the draw and will begin against a qualifier.
Sharapova, twice a champ at the French Open and a previous world number one, is right now unranked and will require a trump card to contend at Roland Garros, with the France’s tennis organization yet to declare its choice.