Dayton Daily News

Sharapova retires from tennis at age 32 with five Slam titles

- By Howard Fendrich

Maria Sharapova was a transcende­ntstarinte­nnisfromth­e time she was a teenager, someone whose grit and groundstro­kes earned her a career Grand Slam and whose offcourt success included millions of dollars more in endorsemen­t deals than prize money.

And yet, Sharapova walked away from her sport rather quietly Wednesday at the age of 32, ending a career that featured five major championsh­ips, time at No. 1 in the WTA rankings, a 15-month doping ban and plenty of problems with her right shoulder.

There was no goodbye tournament, no last moment in the spotlight, for someone so used to garnering so much attention for so long, with or without a racket in hand.

“I’ve been pretty good in the past, balancing my time with my sponsors with my tennis, because I know my priority. At the end of the day, what I love doing is competing, and that’s where my heart is at: on center court,“Sharapova said in a 2006 interview before that year’s U.S. Open.

“There are a couple of sides of me,“she said then. “There’s the Maria that’s a tennis player. There’s the Maria that is a normal girl. And there’s the Maria who’s a businesswo­man. And that’s where the ‘Maria Sharapova brand’ comes into play.”

Around that time, she signed a “lifetime“contract with a racket company, a deal that eventually was ended. And twoweeksaf­terthat,shewould win the U.S. Open trophy while wearing an outfit that resembled a sparkly black cocktail dress, part of the “couple of sides“persona she cultivated.

Two years later, though,

Sharapova missed the tournament at Flushing Meadows because she needed surgery on her shoulder, which has troubled her off and on ever since; she had another operation in 2019.

She lost the last four matches she played at major tournament­s, with first-round exits in her past three appearance­s, including at the Australian Open in January. That turned out to be the last match of her career.

In an essay written for Vanity Fair and Vogue, posted online Wednesday, Sharapova asks: “How do you leave behind the only life you’ve ever known?”

She disclosed that she “had a procedure to numb my shoulder to get through the match“a half-hour before walking on court for a first-round exit at last year’s U.S. Open, writing: “I share this not to garner pity, but to paint my new reality:

My body had become a distractio­n.”

Born in Russia, and “discovered“by Martina Navratilov­a at an exhibition event in Moscow, Sharapova moved to Florida as a child and trained at the Nick Bollettier­i Tennis Academy. Since returning from that suspension in 2017, she managed to reach only one Slam quarterfin­al.

Her loss last month sent Sharapova’s ranking tumbling to 373rd this week. A little more than a month later, she told the world she was done.

“Tennis showed me the world — and it showed me what I was made of. It’s how I tested myself and how I measured my growth,“she wrote on Twitter on Wednesday. “And so in whatever I might choose for my next chapter, my next mountain, I’ll still be pushing. I’ll still be climbing. I’ll still be growing.”

 ?? ANJA NIEDRINGHA­US / AP ?? LEFT: Maria Sharapova, 32, is retiring from profession­al tennis after winning five Grand Slam singles titles between 2004 and 2014. CELESTE SLOMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES RIGHT: In 2004, Sharapova blows a kiss to the crowd after a match on the Centre Court at Wimbledon. Sharapova has been dealing with shoulder problems for years. In an essay written for Vanity Fair and Vogue, she asks: “How do you leave behind the only life you’ve ever known?”
ANJA NIEDRINGHA­US / AP LEFT: Maria Sharapova, 32, is retiring from profession­al tennis after winning five Grand Slam singles titles between 2004 and 2014. CELESTE SLOMAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES RIGHT: In 2004, Sharapova blows a kiss to the crowd after a match on the Centre Court at Wimbledon. Sharapova has been dealing with shoulder problems for years. In an essay written for Vanity Fair and Vogue, she asks: “How do you leave behind the only life you’ve ever known?”
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