Ash Barty surprisingly retired from tennis at age 25 while ranked No. 1 and less than two months after winning the Australian Open for her third Grand Slam singles title.
“I’m so happy, and I’m so ready. I just know at the moment, in my heart, for me as a person, this is right,” Barty said, her voice shaky at times, during a six-minute video posted on her Instagram account Wednesday in Australia.
Saying it was time to “chase other dreams,” Barty said she no longer feels compelled to do what she knows is required to be the best she can be at tennis.
Barty announced her engagement to trainee golf professional Garry Kissick in November, leading up to the Australian Open. The pair had been dating since 2016.
“It’s the first time I’ve actually said it out loud, and yeah, it’s hard to say,” Barty said of her decision to retire, which she announced during an informal interview with her former doubles partner, Casey Dellacqua. “I don’t have the physical drive, the emotional want and everything it takes to challenge yourself at the very top of the level any more. I am spent.”
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This is not the first time Barty has walked away from tennis. She was the Wimbledon junior champion at age 15 in 2011, presaging a promising professional career, but left the tour entirely for nearly two years in 2014 because of burnout, saying she was overwhelmed by the pressure and travel required.
She played professional cricket back home in Australia then eventually picked up a racket and returned to tennis.
Barty went on to win singles major championships on three different surfaces — on clay at the 2019 French Open, on grass at Wimbledon last year and on the hard courts of Melbourne Park in January, becoming the first Australian player in 44 years to triumph at the nation’s Grand Slam tournament.
But she hasn’t played a tournament since being presented with her Australian Open trophy by seven-time Grand Slam singles champion Evonne Goolagong Cawley, her mentor and Indigenous and Australian tennis icon, after a straight-sets final victory over Danielle Collins.
“I am so supportive of Ash that she does what makes her happy,” Goolagong Cawley told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “I can’t wait to see what happens in the next chapter of Ash’s life and what helps her achieve her dreams.”
Barty won 15 tour-level titles in singles and 12 in doubles since first turning pro in 2010. She spent 121 weeks at No. 1 in the rankings, including the past 114 in a row.
Her announcement was all the more stunning from an on-court perspective given her recent run of success. Barty had won 25 of her past 26 matches and three of her past four events.
Only one other woman has walked away from the sport while atop the WTA rankings. Justine Henin was No. 1 when she retired in May 2008, after spending 61 consecutive weeks ranked at the top. Henin also was 25 at the time of her retirement, but she did come back two years after her announcement, reaching the final of the 2010 Australian Open before stepping away for good in 2011.
In a statement released by the WTA, CEO Steve Simon called Barty “the ultimate competitor” and said she “has always led by example through the unwavering professionalism and sportsmanship she brought to every match.”
“We will miss her,” Simon said.
During her 21-month sabbatical from tennis as a teen, Barty played cricket with the Brisbane Heat of the Women’s Big Bash League. She returned to tennis in May 2016, playing a $50,000 ITF event in Eastbourne — winning three qualifying matches and three more in the main draw.
Barty Leaves On Top
• Current world No. 1
• 3-time Grand Slam winner (2019 French Open, 2021 Wimbledon, 2022 Australian Open)
• First Australian to win her home major since Chris O’Neil in 1978
• First woman in Open era (since 1968) to win each of her first 3 major final appearances
• 15 career singles titles
• 114 consecutive weeks at No. 1, the 4th-longest streak since the rankings were introduced in 1975
• $23.8M career prize money
• 305-102 career singles record
— ESPN Stats & Information
One year later, she was ranked No. 88. By the end of 2017, Barty was an established member of the top 20.
“I know I’ve done this before,” Barty said with a laugh in the retirement video, “but in a very different feeling. I’m so grateful to everything that tennis has given me. It’s given me all of my dreams, plus more, but I know that the time is right now for me to step away and chase other dreams and to, yeah, put the rackets down.”
A semifinal loss to Petra Kvitova in Doha, Qatar, in February was the last match she played in 2020; Barty stayed home in Australia for the balance of the season when the pandemic emerged.
After six months on the road in 2021 and after winning five titles, including at Wimbledon, Barty ended her season abruptly after a loss to Shelby Rogers at the US Open.
“Wimbledon last year changed a lot for me as a person and for me as an athlete,” Barty said. “When you work so hard your whole life for one goal — to be able to win Wimbledon, which was my dream, the one true dream that I wanted in tennis — that really changed my perspective.”
She described what she termed a “gut feeling” after Wimbledon about maybe being ready to move on, but she also described herself then as not “quite fulfilled.” Her victory at the Australian Open satisfied another gap, and Barty said she was completely aware that “my happiness wasn’t dependent on the results.”
Barty’s closing words, at least for now — she has a news conference planned for Thursday — came at the end of the video.
“I’ll never, ever, ever stop loving tennis,” she said. “It will always be a massive part of my life, but now I think it’s important I get to enjoy the next phase of my life as Ash Barty the person, not Ash Barty the athlete.”
ESPN Stats & Information contributed to this report.
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