Japanese Paralympic legend Shingo Kunieda stated on Tuesday he was ending his illustrious profession glad that wheelchair tennis was now “finally seen as a sport” within the eyes of the general public.
Kunieda is named the Roger Federer of wheelchair tennis and gained 50 Grand Slam titles and 4 Paralympic gold medals, together with a 3rd singles title on the Covid-postponed Tokyo Games in 2021.
The 38-year-old, who introduced his retirement final month, additionally spent a complete of 582 weeks as the boys’s world primary.
Kunieda stated his first Paralympic gold medal on the 2004 Athens Games was not even reported on the sports activities pages of Japan’s newspapers however attitudes have since “changed a lot”.
“After the Tokyo Games, it really felt like it was now being seen as a sport,” he advised reporters.
“I had always been trying to get people to think of it as a sport, and last year I didn’t feel the pressure to do that any more.
“Finally, I was able to just purely play tennis and compete against my opponent.”
Kunieda, who was identified with spinal most cancers as a baby, stated he “didn’t even know what the Paralympics were” when he first picked up a racket as an 11-year-old.
He ends his profession as one of many Paralympics’ biggest athletes, and was primary within the International Tennis Federation’s year-end rankings 10 occasions.
He additionally gained all Grand Slam singles titles in the identical calendar 12 months 5 occasions. The final prize to elude him was the Wimbledon males’s singles title, which was launched in 2016.
He chalked that off when he beat Britain’s Alfie Hewett in final 12 months’s remaining.
“Wimbledon was the last title left for me to win, and after I hit the winning point, I celebrated with my team,” he stated.
“The first words that slipped out my mouth were ‘now I retire’, right there on the court.”
The Japanese authorities is contemplating giving Kunieda the celebrated People’s Honour Award for achievements in sport, leisure and tradition.
Kunieda, who turned skilled in 2009, stated he has solely a imprecise thought of what he intends to do subsequent however he wish to proceed contributing to wheelchair tennis.
His 16-year-old Japanese compatriot Tokito Oda reached the ultimate of the Australian Open males’s singles final month in solely his third Grand Slam look.
“I think I’ve left a bigger footprint than I thought I would when I turned professional,” Kunieda stated.
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com