Shingo Kunieda, essentially the most profitable males’s participant in wheelchair tennis,
is set to retire. The announcement comes simply months after Kunieda turned the primary
men’s wheelchair tennis player to finish the profession Golden Slam – one of many rarest achievements in tennis. The 38-year-old – who was paralyzed by a spinal tumor when he was 9 – is a record-breaking wheelchair tennis icon, and winner of three Paralympic singles gold medals, in addition to 28 Grand Slam titles.
50 grand slam titles
Kunieda is the winner of a formidable 28 wheelchair Grand Slam singles, along with 22 wheelchair doubles Grand Slam titles. He received his first Grand Slam trophy in 2006 at Wimbledon, whereas additionally successful his fiftieth and last title ultimately 12 months’s Wimbledon when he lastly received the lads’s singles title on the All England Membership to finish the profession Grand Slam. In his last season, Kunieda additionally received the Australian Open (boasting 11 titles in whole), in addition to the French Open. And, that’s not all: Kunieda has additionally received three singles gold medals on the 2008, 2012, and 2021 Paralympics. All through the final 2022 season, he additionally switched the worldwide prime spot with champion British wheelchair tennis participant, Alfie Hewitt, 4 occasions.
699 wheelchair singles in whole
In whole, Kunieda has received 699 wheelchair singles all through his outstanding profession – near the 700 at present received by Esther Vergeer, the primary champion in ladies’s wheelchair tennis. Particularly, Kunieda holds a 699-106 document in singles and 395-127 in doubles. Certainly, Kunieda has led a record-breaking profession and serves as inspiration to different individuals with disabilities the world over – he’s dwelling proof a incapacity
doesn’t stop anyone from accomplishing something they set their thoughts to. Though typical sports activities are usually inaccessible to individuals with disabilities, there are luckily
plenty of accessible individual and team sports, together with wheelchair tennis, that enable everybody to hitch in.
Time to hold up the racket
“I’ve been desirous about retirement since my dream got here true on the Tokyo Paralympics. Final 12 months’s Wimbledon singles title for the primary time made me really feel that my vitality was little left to compete,” Kunieda mentioned. “By capturing the tenth time (as ITF) World Champion, I felt that I had achieved sufficient in what I wished to perform and thought it was the proper time to retire.”
Kunieda’s announcement has additionally made an influence on many large names in wheelchair tennis.
“Sad news to hear in regards to the retirement of Shingo Kunieda. Undoubtedly the most effective athletes this sport has and ever will see. You’re a unprecedented function mannequin and ambassador and what you’ve achieved on and off the courtroom has been inspirational,” Alfie Hewiit commented on Twitter. “We’ve shared some large moments and epic battles alongside the best way, some I need to neglect. You permit an enormous legacy behind you. You and your crew ought to be very proud. Benefit from the retirement Shing.”