Norway’s tennis star
Casper Ruud has made an interesting
comment about using nasal strip, similar to what Spain’s
Carlos Alcaraz wore in
the recent past. The three-time Grand Slam runner-up recently wore a black nasal
strip during the
Dallas Open.
He booked his place in the semifinal after his opponent, Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka, was forced to retire because of a fitness concern. The match's final score was 7-5, 3-2. After the match, Ruud explained the reason for using the nasal strip, which has been famously worn by the former world number one Alcaraz in the past.
"Yeah, it's just a kind of interesting little gimmick I
bought online, not on eBay, but another kind of interesting, maybe shady
webpage,” he said. “I bought it to try during sleep because when I'm back home
in Norway and it's cold during the winter, I wake up and my nose is blocked in
a way. Whatever happens overnight, I'm not sure but I always have to blow my
nose a lot in the morning so I thought maybe it can get a little more air in
there and see how it works. It worked really well actually, I was surprised by
how well it works. And I thought, why not try to bring it to practice, it feels
like I'm breathing better so just a few percentage extra of oxygen through the
nose, that's what it's about. For me, it works. Maybe it's a placebo or
whatever, but I feel like it works. I've been playing quite well with it so why
not keep it going.”
Ruud is now set to face Spain’s Jaume Munar in the last-four
clash on Saturday. The Spaniard cemented his place in the semifinal after
beating Italy’s Matteo Arnaldi in the final with a score of 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. It
will be the first-ever meeting between the two in professional tennis.