Former world tennis king Roger Federer hinted, without elaborating, that he will remain close to the tennis world after his retirement as he arrived in London on Tuesday to play the Laver Cup, his final official event.
“I don’t know exactly what my future will be, but I don’t want to completely leave a sport that has given me everything,” the former world No. 1 told Swiss Radio Television (RTS).
The twenty-time Grand Slam champion told RTS afterward that he was “relieved” to announce his retirement.
Basel acknowledged to this media outlet that he held back “a couple of tears” but said he was “happy to take the plunge.”
“My knee wouldn’t let me, I wasn’t progressing well enough and then I had a scan result that wasn’t very satisfactory so I thought it was over,” he explained. Details that Federer had not revealed last week.
The tennis legend, 41, announced in a press release on Thursday that he will retire at the end of the Laver Cup, a competition to be held in London from Friday to Sunday.
Federer has not played since being knocked out in the quarter-finals of Wimbledon in July 2021 by a bum knee.
