Amelie Mauresmo retires from tennis

Two-time Grand Slam winner Amelie Mauresmo has announced her retirement from tennis at the age of 30. The former world No 1, who currently stands 21 in the rankings, won Wimbledon and th
Amelie Mauresmo holds the Championship plate, after defeating Justine Henin in the singles final on the Centre Court at Wimbledon. (AP / File photo)
Amelie Mauresmo holds the Championship plate, after defeating Justine Henin in the singles final on the Centre Court at Wimbledon. (AP / File photo)
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Two-time Grand Slam winner Amelie Mauresmo has announced her retirement from tennis at the age of 30.

The former world No 1, who currently stands 21 in the rankings, won Wimbledon and the Australian Open in 2006 during a stellar career which saw her land 25 singles titles.

"I made this decision after careful consideration," an emotional Mauresmo told a news conference at Issy, on the outskirts of Paris.

Mauresmo came to prominence at Grand Slam level with a run to the 1999 Australian Open and she reached the semis at the US Open that same year.

Her Wimbledon title success came after three losing semi-final showings.

In 2004 she won Olympic silver. However, she suffered disappointments on home clay at Roland-Garros, where she could only manage two runs to the quarter-finals.

In 2005 she won the Masters end of season event.

Mauresmo's last appeared on court was on Sept 2 when she lost in the second round of the US Open against 39th-ranked Canadian Aleksandra Wozniak in straight sets.

She announced the following month she would not play again this season citing a slump in her motivation to keep competing at the top level.

Her final title came appropriately enough at the Partis Open earlier this year when she defeated Elena Dementiev.

Mauresmo factfile:

Date of birth: July 5, 1979

Place of birth: Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France

Professional debut: 1993

Current world ranking: No. 21

Best world ranking: No 1 (first time on Sept 13, 2004)

WTA wins: 25 singles, 3 doubles

Grand Slam tournaments:

Australian Open: champion 2006, finalist 1999, quarter-finals 2002, 2004, 2005

French Open: quarter-finals 2003, 2004

Wimbledon: champion 2006, semi-finals 2002, 2004, 2005

US Open: semi-finals 1999, 2006, quarter-finals 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005

Masters: champion 2005, finalist 2003 and 2006, semi-finals 2004

Olympic Games: silver medal 2004

World junior championships: champion 1996

French Open juniors: champion 1996

Wimbledon juniors: champion 1996

Win-loss record in singles: 545/227

Career earnings: 15,022,476 dollars

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