Calling Signals:
BUCKY FOX
A Break
Too Long
MONICA SELES
Monica may have blown
her all-time best standing
By BUCKY FOX
of TheColumnists.com
Pro tennis is about to hit the U.S. hard-court season, and one loud former champion wont be joining the party: Monica Seles.
She will never grunt in front of big crowds again. Shes suffering from a foot injury that keeps her from running--and has kept her away from the tour since the French Open last May.
So, quietly, this is the end for Seles. She would have to overcome rust and age--shes 30--to compete again. And she would face the prospect of first-round losses to skinny Russians.
Seles wont put up with such humiliation. So, heres calling her career over. Expect the announcement any month.
When that press conference comes, TV will highlight Seles career, and one theme will hold serve throughout: If Seles had not been knifed 11 years ago, she wouldve been the greatest womens player in history.
Its a topspin we hear whenever Seles comes up. As soon as her retirement announcement comes, Mary Carillo and other tennis voices will laud Seles in shouldve been the greatest terms.
After all, Seles had won eight Grand Slam titles by the spring of 1993. She had passed Steffi Graf as the worlds dominant player.
The pro-Seles campaign makes it clear: At just 19, Seles was on course to smash Grand Slam records. Only the attack of April 30, 1993, when German sicko Guenter Parche stabbed her in the upper back during a tournament in Hamburg, kept her from reaching the all-time pinnacle.
No one has publicly disputed that, so let me be the first: Monica Seles blew it. She alone must take responsibility for throwing away the meat of her tennis prime after she had physically recovered from the stabbing.
Seles lost her shot at all-time No. 1 because she left the pro circuit for two years and three months after the mugging. She thus skipped two U.S. Opens, two Australian Opens, two French Opens and two Wimbledons in which she really was healthy enough to compete.
She said during her 1993-95 break that the half-inch wound had healed--that the mental trauma was keeping her from playing.
Mental trauma? Lets tell it like it is: She wasnt tough enough to bounce right back.
Heres tough:
Paul Pierce was stabbed in his neck, back and chest and hit over the head with a bottle in a nightclub brawl in September, 2000. A month later he was in training camp for the Boston Celtics.
Picabo Street blew out her left knee while training for the ski season in December, 1996. She was skiing again seven months later, and seven months after that won the Olympic super G gold medal.
Niki Lauda nearly burned to death in a Grand Prix car crash in 1976 and was back on the track in seven weeks. He won the world championship the next year.
Now thats physical and mental trauma. Those athletes faced fear and conquered it immediately. They had the steel Seles lacked.
If Graf had been knifed, heres betting she wouldve played within two months. Ditto Serena Williams. Theyre stone-cold champions--damned if a little knife job would knock them out 27 months.
All Graf did during Seles hiatus was keep winning--on the way to a near-record 22 Grand Slam titles. Many tennis followers take offense at that, since it was a Graf fan who stuck it to Seles. Furthermore, say those fans, Seles was dominating Graf before the Hamburg ambush.
Thats another point no one disputes. Until now.
Seles did stop Grafs 66-match winning streak in the 1990 Berlin final. And beat her in the French Open finals of 1990 and 92. Yet Graf had a 10-5 edge lifetime against Seles. And on the biggest stage of all--the Wimbledon final--Graf waxed Seles 6-2, 6-1 in 1992.
Graf, who had her own problems with her wayward father, had what it took to overcome them. She won big time on every surface. Shes the greatest champion of them all.
Seles will forever ponder why she let that knife-inflicted pause drag out into two-plus years. Its a decision that shows she didnt have that champions mettle, no matter what the TV puff pieces say.
Ill be thinking that when Seles says shes never coming back.
©2004 by Bucky Fox.
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