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Raducanu 'isn't hiding any more' after stalking ordeal

2025-12-02 10:13
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Raducanu 'isn't hiding any more' after stalking ordeal

Emma Raducanu is now comfortable travelling by public transport and does not feel she is "hiding from anything any more" after her stalking ordeal.

Raducanu 'isn't hiding any more' after stalking ordealStory byEmma Raducanu looks on during the China OpenRaducanu felt sufficiently comfortable to commute to London by train from Bromley in the past few weeks [Getty Images]Russell Fuller - Tennis correspondentTue, December 2, 2025 at 10:13 AM UTC·2 min read

British tennis player Emma Raducanu says she no longer feels she is "hiding from anything" after being targeted earlier this year by a man who "exhibited fixated behaviour".

The 2021 US Open champion was distressed and tearful when she saw a man who had followed her to four successive tournaments in the stands during a match in Dubai in February.

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The man, who was removed and later given a restraining order by Dubai police, had given Raducanu a letter and asked for a photograph in a coffee shop the previous day.

The Briton says she has "got over" the incident - but does, however, admit to being occasionally unnerved when seeing printed photographs of herself.

"What did creep me out was I saw a photo of myself in London, and I didn't see the paparazzi [photographers] taking it," the 23-year-old said.

"I was with my two best friends. I just didn't see the 'paps'. That's obviously creepy, when you're like: I didn't see them - how did they take this photo?

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"But other than that, I feel good because someone's always watching my back."

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In June, Raducanu told BBC Sport she had been feeling more safe at tournaments, but was still wary whenever she went out.

She is training with coach Francisco Roig in Barcelona this month, but has spent much of the past few weeks commuting to London by train from her parents' house in Bromley.

While being part of rush hour travel is an experience in itself, Raducanu says she is becoming more comfortable being recognised in public.

"In rush hour, people are so locked in to their world. They're not really paying attention and probably not expecting to see me either," she said.

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"I have my hood up, or whatever, but they're just so focused and absorbed in their own world.

"It's all so crazy. It's like everyone's on a mission. You have to get the elbows out, just to get through.

"If people recognise me, if people see me, and they want to come up to me, then that's great, but I don't necessarily feel like I'm hiding from anything any more."

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