‘It will depend on my health’: Roger Federer says he has ‘no reason’ to end career… but admits he first thought about retirement a DECADE ago
- Roger Federer is still impressing on the circuit despite being 38 years old
- He won his last Grand Slam in January 2018 but has won seven ATP titles since
- Federer has now said he will only retire when his body tells him he should
Roger Federer first thought about how long his playing career would last in 2009 but a decade later the 38-year-old is still going strong and says he will keeping playing until his body decides otherwise.
Federer won his last Grand Slam in January 2018 when he claimed his sixth Australian Open but the Swiss has won seven ATP titles since then, taking his career tally to 103.
Federer, who ended the year behind Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic in the world rankings, said he cannot predict when he will stop playing.
Roger Federer revealed he first thought about how long his playing career would last in 2009
‘My retirement will depend on my health. At the moment I do not see any reason to retire,’ the 20-time Grand Slam winner said ahead of exhibition matches in South America.
‘I did not think I would play beyond 35, 36 years and here I am. I am doing well physically. I cannot predict when it will be the time to stop.
‘I think in 2009 I questioned it for the first time. (It has been) 10 years and here I am. I’m exactly where I wanted to be at this age.’
But the Swiss icon has now said he will keeping playing until his body decides otherwise
Federer is six titles shy of American Jimmy Connors’ record of 109 in the Open era. And he admits each one means more as he gets older.
‘With age everything gets a bit more difficult,’ Federer added. ‘But at the same time, with experience also you can savour the moments more.
‘I don’t know how it’s going to end. I hope it’s just going to be somewhat emotional I guess and nice … I just hope it’s going to be good, the whole process, and not too difficult.’