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SHINGO KUNIEDA, the most successful player in the history of wheelchair tennis, announced his retirement from the sport today at the age of 38.
The top-ranked Kunieda won 28 grand slam singles titles and completed the career grand slam of all four majors when he won Wimbledon in 2022.
“I have been thinking about the retirement since my dream came true at the Tokyo Paralympics,” the Japanese player said on social media. “Last year’s Wimbledon singles title for the first time made me feel that I had little energy left to compete.
“Capturing the 10th time [as ITF] world champion, I felt that I had done enough in what I wanted to accomplish and thought it was the right time to retire.”
Kunieda won 11 Australian Open titles, with eight wins at both Roland-Garros and the US Open and one Wimbledon title.
He also won 22 grand slam doubles titles and three singles gold medals at the Paralympics, in 2008, 2012, and in Tokyo in 2021. He won a doubles gold medal in 2004.
Women’s tennis legend Billie Jean King, who also completed a career grand slam as part of her 12 women’s singles major titles, said on Twitter: “Cheers to @shingokunieda, who today announced his retirement from tennis following a 20-year career.
“He is the first men’s wheelchair tennis player to complete a career grand slam, and his 2022 singles win at Wimbledon was his 50th major title. The journey continues!”
Kunieda’s retirement leaves Britain’s Alfie Hewett, 13 years his junior, as world number one and top seed in the Australian Open wheelchair tournament, which starts tomorrow.
Hewett was runner-up to Kunieda last year and warmed up last week by retaining his Melbourne Open singles title with a 6-2, 6-2 win against Japan’s teen star Tokito Oda.
