Tennis: Bartoli, Wimbledon champion retires

TENNIS-GBR-WIMBLEDON

File photo: Marion Bartoli, left, with her Wimbledon silverware

France’s Wimbledon champion, Marion Bartoli has made a surprise announcement that she is retiring from tennis.

She made the announcement in Cincinnati, United States, after she lost her second round match in three sets to Simona Halep.

Ranked 7th in the world, Bartoli was beaten 6-3,4-6, 1-6, by the 25th ranked Romanian.

“I have pain everywhere after 45 minutes or an hour of play…. it’s just body wise I just can’t do it anymore,” Bartoli said after the match.

“It’s time for me to retire and to call it a career. I feel it’s time for me to walk away,” said the 28-year-old.

The announcement came just two weeks before Bartoli was scheduled to compete in the US Open in New York.

Bartoli said Wimbledon helped her reach her goal of winning a Grand Slam but also took a toll on her physical and mental wellbeing.

“I’ve been a tennis player for a long time, and I had the chance to make my biggest dream a reality,” said Bartoli, who won more than $11 million in prize money during her 13-year career.

“I felt I really, really pushed through the ultimate limits to make it happen. But now I just can’t do it anymore,” she said.

“I’ve been through a lot of injuries since the beginning of the year. I really pushed through and left it all during … Wimbledon.”

“I really felt I gave all the energy I have left inside my body. It (Wimbledon) will stay forever with me, but now my body just can’t cope with everything,” she added.

Bartoli, who turned pro in 2000, has battled a series of injuries over the past few years and has played just three matches since her Wimbledon victory.

She won a match last week in Toronto over American Lauren Davis but lost to 33rd-ranked Magdalena Rybarikova the next day.

“I have pain everywhere after 45 minutes or an hour of play,” Bartoli said. “I’ve been doing this for so long … body wise I just can’t do it anymore.”

For the past several years, Bartoli has been by far France’s best female player.

Besides Wimbledon, Bartoli won seven other WTA Tour titles, beginning with Auckland in 2006. Her most recent, prior to Wimbledon, were both in 2011 — at Eastbourne, England, and Osaka, Japan.

“It’s been a tough decision to take, I don’t take this easily,” she said.

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Simply walking was now difficult for her, Bartoli said, adding that her hips and lower back also bothered her almost constantly.

“My Achilles is hurting me a lot, so I can’t really walk normally after a match like that, especially on the hard court when the surface is so hard,” she said.

“And my shoulder and my hips and my lower back. My body is just done.”

The player known for her quirky mannerisms and non-stop fidjeting on the court, said she spoke to her family, including her father, by phone about the decision.

“He knows, more than anyone, how much I worked and what I did to make it happen, to make my dream a reality,” she said.

“He is proud of me. He is proud of what I did and he kind of knew I just couldn’t do it anymore. He kind of felt it.”

Bartoli has never been one to do things the easy way.

France's Marion Bartoli  quits tennis
France’s Marion Bartoli quits tennis

She grew up outside the tennis mainstream, coached by her father Walter, a doctor who had no background in the sport and yet gave up his job to teach his daughter how to become a professional.

Walter constructed home-made contraptions to help with her practice sessions, while her court positioning inside the baseline is a legacy of her days learning the game in the Haute-Loire region of France on a tiny court.

Earlier this year, Bartoli ended her coaching partnership with her father and went through several different trainers, with the most recent being former world number one and French compatriot Amelie Mauresmo.

Bartoli, who has a high IQ of 175, didn’t say what she plans to do next.

But she insists it is the right time to move on.

“I’m sure I will find something. I just need a bit of time to kind of settle down,” she said.

“I have the right to do something else as well. I’ve been playing for a long, long time, and it’s time for me now. It is.”

“Everyone will remember my Wimbledon title. No one will remember the last match I played here. That was probably the last little bit of something that was left inside me,” she said about her Wimbledon title.

She said she has communicated her decision to her father.

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