LONDON — Former British number one Johanna Konta
announced her retirement from tennis on Wednesday.
The 30-year-old has struggled with persistent knee trouble
over the past couple of seasons and has slipped to 113 in the world rankings --
a far cry from her career high of number four.
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Konta, who reached the semi-finals of three of the four
majors, plus the quarter-finals of the US Open, made her announcement on social
media with a post headlined 'Grateful'.
She wrote: "This is the word that I've probably used
the most during my career and is the word that I feel explains it best in the
end.
"My playing career has come to an end, and I am so
incredibly grateful for the career that it turned out to be. All the evidence
pointed towards me not 'making' it in this profession.
"However my luck materialized in the people that came
into my life and impacted my existence in ways that transcended tennis.
"I am so incredibly grateful for these people. You know
who you are. Through my own resilience and through the guidance of others, I
got to live my dreams. I got to become what I wanted and said as a child.
"How incredibly fortunate I count myself to be. How
grateful I am."
In June, Konta won the Nottingham Open, becoming the first
British woman to lift a WTA title on home soil since Sue Barker in 1981.
But that victory was soon overshadowed by the astounding
success of then 18-year-old compatriot Emma Raducanu in becoming the first
qualifier to win a Grand Slam when she took the women's singles title at the US
Open in September.