Monica Seles: My tribute to a tennis warrior...

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Future hall-of-famer Monica Seles has not played a competitive tennis match in nearly five years but had hinted a few months back that she might come back for one last go-round at the age of 34. But the former number one player, plagued by a foot injury, has thought better of it and announced her retirement from the game she once dominated winning four Australian Opens, three French Opens, two U.S. Open and making it to the finals of Wimbledon in 1992.

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,amonica.jpg"I have for some time considered a return to professional play, but I have now decided not to pursue that," she said in a statement. "I will continue to play exhibitions, participate in charity events, promote the sport, but will no longer plan my schedule around the tour."

I have many memories of Monica including the way she burst onto the scene as a 15-year-old in 1989 beating Chris Evert in a tournament final and the next month, making it to the semifinals of the French Open. a year later, she would be the champion in Paris at sweet sixteen. She'd giggle her way through press conferences, grunt her way through matches, and change her hairstyle every few months. She was a fun champion and contrasted nicely with the more serious Steffi Graf, her biggest rival. The two had seemed destined for a Chris Evert-Martina Navratilova type of rivalry with their most thrilling match was the epic 1992 French Open final. On an unforgettable Parisian afternoon, Seles prevailed 6-2, 3-6, 10-8.

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By 1993, Monica had won had won eight of the sports majors at the age of 19. You wondered just how many she would go on to win. But during a match in Hamburg, Germany, a deranged Graf fan leaped from the stands and stabbed her in the back with a knife as she was sitting during a changeover. It was one of the most shocking attacks ever in pro sports.

Monica healed from the attack physically but mentally, she was shattered and afraid to return to the game. She was depressed, gained weight and stayed away for two-and-a-half years. But in August 2005, she was finally ready to come back and in her first tournament, she blasted through the field at the Canadian Open and a few weeks later, did the same thing at the U.S. Open until she was finally stopped in three riveting sets by Graf in the classic final.

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I was at the U.S. Open a year later and watched Monica play an early round match and she looked sharp and fit and once again, reached the final where she again lost to Graf, this time in straight sets. But earlier in the year, she had won the Australian Open title (above) and at 22, you figured she had many more in her. But it was not to be. Monica, struggling with fitness and injuries, never again dominated but hung around the top 10 for six more years, won tournaments here and there and reached her last grand slam final at the French Open in 1998.


In closing, I want to share my favorite Monica Seles memory and it is one I will cherish forever. I was in the fifth row courtside at Staples Center for a first-round match between Seles and Lyndsay Davenport at the 2002 year-end championships. Monica was getting blown away and just as it looked like she would lose, she saved SEVEN match points (with winners each time) in the second set and went on to win the match. The crowd was going crazy and I was delirious. It was as gutsy a match as I had ever seen someone pull out.

We will never know if Monica would have posted the historic numbers of Graf who went on to win 22 major titles or Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova with 18 each. But, my hunch is, she would have come close because she was as driven, focused and determined a competitor as the game had ever known. While she was not as appreciated during her peak, when she came back post-stabbing, she was beloved for her courage.

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Greg Hernandez, Page 2 "News Lite" columnist for the Los Angeles Daily News, gives you a fly-on-the-wall account of the Oscars and other awards show, movie premieres, film festivals and various star-studded events. He also shares his celebrity interviews as well as specially-selected videos and photos. He writes about all things pop culture through a gay man's eyes ...
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This page contains a single entry by Greg Hernandez published on February 18, 2008 3:40 PM.

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