


Baghdatis was playing a Challenger event in Tashkent when he got the news.

(Images via Yahoo! Sports)
"I went onto the court and said to her, 'Caro, it does not matter whether it's going to be 5-0, 4-1 or 3-2. You can not play the next round, so you shouldn't take the risk,"' he explained to Danish radio.Last year, tennis governing bodies created a Tennis Integrity Unit in an effort to combat gambling and match-fixing in the sport.
"I'm very proud of Caroline, because she stopped the fight and gave her opponent a chance."
"We're just looking into everything that happened in this match," WTA spokesman Neil Robinson said, adding that he believed the information would go to the integrity unit.Wozniacki immediately dismissed suggestions that the result was rigged.
"So, people bet on my matches. Some win, others lose. I just know that I am clean. It is most important to me," Wozniacki said.Despite her injury, Wozniacki has confirmed her participation in the season-ending WTA Tour Championship in Doha next week.
"And if anyone is in doubt about my injury, I can both produce scan from the hospital and a report from the tournament physiotherapist."