British tennis star Emma Raducanu concludes this year's campaign and will keep coach into the 2026 season.
The British player made it to the third stage in three Grand Slam tournaments Grand Slam events during the season.
Britain's Emma Raducanu has pulled out of her final two events in 2025 due to the illness she has been fighting for the last week and a half.
Raducanu, aged 22 had planned to participate in Tokyo and Hong Kong but chose to travel back to regain her health prior to beginning next year's training.
Those preparations will include her coach Francisco Roig, as the pair have decided to continue collaborating again next season.
Raducanu had her blood pressure taken in her opening round with Ann Li in Wuhan last week and withdrew when behind 6-1 4-1 on a day with extreme humidity.
Another medical visit was necessary a doctor's assessment at the recent Ningbo Open, where she fell in a three-set match to Zhu Lin, a Chinese wildcard in round one.
Her movement was with clear difficulty in the final set in the match with Zhu because of back discomfort that has affected her on several occasions in 2025.
These outcomes meant an encouraging season, in which she climbed into the top 30 globally for the first time in more than three years, concluded with three straight losses.
Raducanu had three match points prior to falling to American player Jessica Pegula in round three in the Beijing tournament last month.
The player achieved twenty-eight matches in the current season and advanced to the semis in Washington, but her standout performance was at March's Miami Open.
Ranked first in Britain reached the quarter-finals of this WTA 1000 tournament, defeating eighth seed Emma Navarro on the way before losing in three sets to the world number four Pegula.
She was coached by Mark Petchey as coach from Miami until Wimbledon, with Roig assuming the role in time for the US Open.
The first plan with the former trainer of Nadal was through the season's conclusion but they will keep working together, with planned training sessions late this year.
She mentioned that her three-day trial with Roig after Wimbledon was like a "black ops mission" as the meeting was kept under wraps.
She nearly succeeded to overcoming Sabalenka, the world number one at their initial event as a team in August's Cincinnati tournament.
The coach also accompanied Raducanu in New York, where she reached the third round before being beaten by 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina.