Former best
tennis player in the world, Monica Seles announced her official retirement from
professional tennis yesterday.
Seles had
not participated in tennis competitions for five years because of an unlucky
succession of foot injuries, but she had not actually retired until now.
“Tennis has been and will always be a huge part of my life.
I have for some time considered a return to professional play, but I have now
decided not to pursue that. I will continue to play exhibitions, participate in
charity events, promote the sport, but will no longer plan my schedule around
the tour,” the 34-year-old Seles said in a statement released by her agent, Agence France-Presse informs.
Monica
Seles was born in former Yugoslavia,
but she became a U.S citizen in 1994. She won nine Grand Slam singles titles
and became the youngest champion in the French Open in 1990, at the age of 16.
In 1993, she was forced to retire from the world of sport for two years, after
a spectator stabbed her in the back with a knife. She was quite successful when
she returned on the tennis field in 1995, but, unfortunately, she could never
regain her best form. The last prize she won was at the Australian Open in
1996.
In 1999,
she suffered stress fracture to her right foot and since then, she has been struggling with repetitive injuries.
Seles said she would now concentrate on
humanitarian work, after being chosen as Goodwill Ambassador and
Spokesperson for its Global Sports for Peace and Development Programme
Initiative by the Intergovernmental Institution for the use of Micro-algae
Spirulina Against Malnutrition, in October 2007.
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