British teenage tennis star Emma Raducanu has revealed the upsetting pain she pushed through to play at the Australian Open, revealing some of her team didn't even want her to play.
The 19-year-old reigning US Open champion looked on track when she raced to a 3-0 lead in the opening set against Montenegro's Danka Kovinic in round two on Thursday night.
But the 17th seed then lost five games in a row and needed a medical time-out for treatment of blisters on her right hand.
Despite battling back she couldn't stop Kovinic winning 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 on Margaret Court Arena.
Speaking after the match, Raducanu revealed she had to go against some her team's wishes to play and every shot she hit was "very painful".
"I have had blisters before but never this bad," she said.
"It's very deep and just in an awkward position that it's so difficult to tape. We've tried so many different alternatives and they've all ended up falling off or making me have no feel of my racquet."
Raducanu said she'd been struggling with blisters since she started playing in Australia because she had gone 21 days without playing, which made her hands soft.
"This particular one has been with me for about five days," she explained.
"I've been trying to tape it for every practice and it would harden and dry out and then once I would play again another layer would just keep ripping off so it ended up being pretty deep.
"It's a bit annoying because I know it's something that will heal in a few days. It's unfortunate timing."
Raducanu was clearly deflated when explaining the situation, but acknowledged the experience would likely make her a better player.
"I did discover elements of my game I didn't know I had before and I can use that going forwards and I just know I've got that fight in me even if I've got one shot I know I can pull myself out of deep situations."
She said she probably had to hit more slice forehands in the match on Thursday than she had in the last few years.
"It was a bit of disbelief the shots I was pulling out or some of the rallies," she said.
"If I can mix (my variety) with my aggressive game style I think it would be a really good and dangerous combination going forward," she later added.
The result of the match on Thursday put Kovinic, the world number 98, into the third round of a major for the first time.
She will now play either two-time Grand Slam winner Simona Halep, seeded 14, or Brazilian Beatriz Haddad Maia for a place in the fourth round.