Seles announces official retirement
MIAMI (Reuters) - Former world number one Monica Seles announced her official retirement from professional tennis at the age of 34 on Thursday, nearly five years since she last played.
Seles won nine grand slam singles titles and 53 tournaments in her career. She had not played competitively since the 2003 French Open but, plagued by a succession of foot injuries, had tried to launch several comebacks.
"I have for some time considered a return to professional play, but I have now decided not to pursue that," Seles said in a statement released by her manager and published on the WTA tour Web site (www.sonyericssonwtatour.com).
The native Yugoslav won her first grand slam at the 1990 French Open and became world number one in 1991, staying top of the rankings until April 1993 when she was stabbed during a match in Hamburg, Germany.
She did not play again for more than two years but she made a swift impact on her return, winning the Canadian Open and Australian Open as well as reaching the U.S. Open final.
Seles, who became a U.S. citizen in 1994, played her final match at the 2003 French Open where she suffered a first-round loss to Nadia Petrova.
She had struggled with foot injuries for years but chose not to undergo surgery, hoping the stress fractures would heal naturally.
In 2004 she competed in World TeamTennis but lost heavily to players she would have beaten easily in her prime.
Larry Scott, CEO of the WTA Tour, paid tribute to Seles. Continued...

