Former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki returning to tennis 3 years after retirement
33-year-old to be granted wild-card entry in U.S. Open, Canada's National Bank Open
Caroline Wozniacki, a former No. 1-ranked tennis player and the 2018 Australian Open champion, announced Thursday that she is returning to competition three years after she retired to start a family.
The U.S. Tennis Association said it will grant Wozniacki a wild-card invitation to participate in the U.S. Open, which begins in New York on Aug. 28. She also is receiving a wild-card entry for the National Bank Open in Montreal that begins earlier in August, she intends to play in the Australian Open next January and hopes to represent Denmark at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Another aim: She wants to show women that it is possible to combine motherhood with a career.
Wozniacki, who turns 33 in July, has not played an official match since losing to Ons Jabeur in the third round of the Australian Open in January 2020. Wozniacki revealed a month earlier that her appearance at Melbourne Park would be the last of her career.
Over these past three years away from the game I got to make up for lost time with my family, I became a mother and now have two beautiful children I am so grateful for. But I still have goals I want to accomplish. I want to show my kids that you can pursue your dreams no matter… <a href="https://t.co/OQatFWxQGK">pic.twitter.com/OQatFWxQGK</a>
—@CaroWozniacki
She and her husband, former NBA player David Lee, have a 2-year-old daughter and an 8-month-old son.
"Over these past three years away from the game I got to make up for lost time with my family, I became a mother and now have two beautiful children I am so grateful for. But I still have goals I want to accomplish. I want to show my kids that you can pursue your dreams no matter your age or role," Wozniacki wrote Thursday on Twitter. "We decided as a family it's time. I'm coming back to play and I can't wait!"
She was No. 1 in the WTA rankings for a total of 71 weeks — first reaching that spot in 2010 — and earned 30 titles, including the first in Grand Slam singles for a player from Denmark when she triumphed in Australia about 5 1/2 years ago.
Wants to be example for mothers
Wozniacki twice was the runner-up at the U.S. Open, in 2009 to Kim Clijsters and in 2014 to good friend Serena Williams, and reached the semifinals at Flushing Meadows three other times.
She announced in October 2018 that she has rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune condition that can cause pain and swelling in the wrist and other joints.
"Am I nervous? Not really. I'm coming back to something I love. Yes, I'll be nervous before a match; I'm OK with that. I'm great with that. Can I win the U.S. Open? I think so. Can I win the Australian Open? I think so," Wozniacki wrote in a first-person piece for Vogue magazine posted Thursday. "That's why I'm doing this. And I guess we'll see what happens."
She wrote about speaking to women "who gave up on their own dreams because they wanted to be with their families, but somewhere deep down they have this yearning to do something they're passionate about."
Wozniacki continued: "I want to show those women that maybe there's a way. It's certainly not easy to find the right balance — and I'm so lucky to have a supportive husband and supportive parents, and the help of a nanny — but I think it's possible. I want to prove that to myself and to those women. You can have both: You can be thrilled with your family and with everything at home and still have a career — and be great at it."
Wozniacki said she began hitting tennis balls last year and, after her father — who was her coach for much of her career — agreed she was striking shots well, she "knew" she had to return.
"How long will I be able to play at my highest level — a year, two years, three years? I don't know. But I know that five years from now, when the kids are in school, it will be too late," she wrote. "I'm not going to make any bold predictions — but if I didn't believe in myself, I wouldn't be doing this: I'm too competitive to just show up and not feel like I'm going to be one of the best players out there."