Thursday, May 15, 2008

The End of an Era

She came and she conquered. She succeeded when few thought she would. She stood out among the crowd but not because of a loud, over the top attitude or because of publicity and fame garnered from elsewhere. She stood out because of her grace, her dignity, her passion and her technique. She is Justine Henin. She had the grace we don’t get to see anymore, she had the dignity to rise above the mishaps and the misgivings; she had the passion which defines the game of tennis and she had the technique, as John McEnroe himself said the best single backhand in men and women’s tennis today. An end to the era of graceful tennis.

Justine Henin, for me, is the last of the tennis players who can make history, who can make a place for themselves in the history of the game. It will be long before another comes. Having won an Olympic gold, 7 Grand Slam titles and just short a win at Wimbledon, she has had a career few can boost of.

According to me she never really got the respect and adulation she deserved off the court, from people who aren’t tennis fanatics. Few know what she has done and what she was capable of. She had the power to intimidate her opponents and they knew that on a good day, which was almost always since the past few years, she was hard to beat.

When one thinks of retirement it is because of injury, of losing the touch or because of age. She retired, at 25, when she was No. 1 and when no one was close to taking that tag, that rank away from her. She retired because the emotion she had towards her game, the game of tennis had diminished. Very few have the courage to do that, those very few are the Champions of their game.

Today is a sad day in the world of tennis. A day that a fan wishes never comes. The day a player retires, puts an end to a wonderful career. I am yet surprised at why she took this step but she must be having her reasons. The first thought that came into my mind was why now? There is the Roland Garros coming up, her slam, her domain. She will be missed, at every tournament, at every slam.

5 comments:

Vertigo said...

I totally agree with you. I also posted a comment on my blog about her retirement. I just can't image tennis in general without her. Her brilliance and dedication to the game (two things lacking in women's tennis, I think) will be surely missed. I am still sad and stunned. :(

Kanta said...

When i lived in England, Wimbeldon was the most looked forward event of the summer. The BBC gave coverage all day and you watched your fill. Got to see great tennis players through the year. Since moving to Canada, the coverage is not the same. Every sport now and then brings a player, someone with natural ability and talent. Some one dedicated to the sport and the love of the game. I am Henin must have a justifiable reason to leave the sport so early. Hopefully she might have inspired a budding player to work towards being the best like Henin.

Shruti Chopra said...

K, didn't know you were a tennis person :D
On the other hand yes I know she must have had reasons but it is disheartening to learn that a player like her will no more be seen in International Tennis, more so because of the Roland Garros and Wimbledon coming up!

I do hope she has inspired a budding tennis player. the sport needs people like her!

Kanta said...

grew up watching Borg, McEnroe, Evert and Navratilova win Wimbledon titles.

My dad loved watching sport so it would be kind of season of ice skating, gymnastics, tennis, cricket and later snooker

Shruti Chopra said...

love Borg and Navratilova from that era!!! =D