Monica Seles (born December 2, 1973) is a former World No.
1 tennis player. During her career, Seles won nine Grand Slam singles
titles and became the youngest-ever champion at the French Open in
1990. She was the most dominant player in women's game during the early-1990s.
However in 1993 Seles was stabbed by a crazed fan of rival player Steffi
Graf. Following this incident, she did not play on the tour again for
over two years. She enjoyed some further success after returning to
the competitive game in 1995, but was never again able to consistently
reproduce her very best form.
Biography
Monica Seles (originally Monika Seleš) was born in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia
(now Vojvodina, Serbia and Montenegro) in 1973. She is an ethnic Hungarian
(her name is spelled Mónika Szeles in the Hungarian language).
Seles began playing tennis at the age of six, coached by her father
Karolj Seleš. She won her first tournament at the age of nine
(despite not fully understanding the scoring system of the game and
having only a vague idea of whether she was leading or trailing her
opponents during her matches). In 1985 at the age of 11, she won the
prestigious Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, and caught the attention
of tennis coach Nick Bollettieri. In 1986, the Seleš family moved
from Yugoslavia to the United States, and Monica enrolled in the Nick
Bollettieri Tennis Academy, where she trained for two years.
Seles played her first professional tournament in 1988 at the age
of 14. The following year she joined the professional tour full-time
and won her first career title at Houston in May 1989, where she beat
Chris Evert in the final. A month later, Seles reached the semifinals
in her first Grand Slam appearance at the French Open, where she lost
to World No. 1 Steff Graf. Seles finished her first year on the tour
ranked World No. 6.
With punishing two-fisted forehand and backhand shots, heavy topspin,
and a strong return of serve, Seles is considered by many to be the
first "power player" in the women's game (paving the way
for subsequent stars like Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova). She
was also well-known for grunting loudly on court as she blasted balls
over the net. On a few occassions this led to complaints from opponents
(who claimed that it was distracting and prevented them from hearing
the ball make contact with her racquet), and warnings from umpires
to keep the noise down.
Seles won her first Grand Slam title at the French Open in 1990. Facing
World No. 1 Graf in the final, Seles saved four set-points in a first-set
tie-breaker (which she won 8-6), and went on to take the match in straight-sets.
In doing so, she became the youngest-ever French Open champion at the
age of 16 years, 6 months.
1991 was the first of two years in which Seles completely dominated
the women's tour. She started out by winning the Australian Open in
January, beating Jana Novotná in the final. In March, she dethroned
Graf as the World No. 1. She then successfully defended her French
Open title, beating the former youngest-ever winner Arantxa Sánchez
Vicario in the final. However after that she did not play at Wimbledon,
and instead took a six-week break, blaming shin splints. But she was
back in time for the US Open, and won it beating Martina Navrátilová in
the final to cement her position at the top of the world rankings.
She also helped Yugoslavia win the Hopman Cup that year.
1992 was an equally dominant year. She successfully defended her titles
at the Australian Open, the French Open, and the US Open. She also
made the final at Wimbledon, but could not manage to break Graf's one
remaining area of dominance on the grass court surface and lost 6-2,
6-1.
During the period from January 1991 to February 1993, Seles won 22
titles and reached 33 finals out of the 34 tournaments she played in.
She compiled an astounding 159-12 win-loss record (92.9% winning percentage),
including a 55-1 win-loss record in Grand Slam tournaments. In the
broader context of her first four years on the circuit (1989-1992),
Seles had a win-loss record of 231-25 (90.2% winning percentage), and
collected 30 titles. Only Chris Evert had a better first four years
in terms of winning percentage (91.1% from 1971 to 1974) and titles
(34) in the Open era.
Despite the blip at Wimbledon in 1992, Seles had clearly dethroned
Graf as the dominant player on the women's tour heading in to 1993.
And there was every reason to believe that this would continue to be
the case for some years to come, especially when Seles beat Graf in
the final to claim her third consecutive Australian Open crown in January
1993.
But everything changed following an incident which shocked the tennis
world on April 30, 1993. During a quarter-final match between Seles
and Magdalena Maleeva at Hamburg, a 38-year-old deranged and obsessive
fan of Steffi Graf named Günter Parche ran from middle of crowd
to the edge of the court during a break between games and plunged a
knife between Seles's shoulder blades. She let out a piercing scream
and was quickly rushed to hospital. Her physical injuries took a few
weeks to heal. But the psychological scars from this incident left
a much deeper impression on Seles, and she did not return to competitive
tennis for over two years. (Parche was charged following the incident,
but was not jailed because he was found to be psychologically abnormal
and was instead sentenced to two years' probation and psychological
treatment. The incident prompted a significant increase in the levels
of security at events on the tour.) [1]
In Seles's absence, Graf re-established herself as the leading player
on the women's tour and regained the World No. 1 ranking (just as Parche
had hoped she would).
During her exile from competitive tennis, Seles became a United States
citizen on May 17, 1994.
Seles returned to the tour in August 1995 and won her first come-back
tournament, the Canadian Open, beating Amanda Coetzer in the final
6-1, 6-0. This prompted many to believe that she could soon be dominating
the circuit again in the way she was before the 1993 stabbing incident.
The following month at the US Open, Seles met Graf in the final and
lost in a dramatic battle 7-6, 0-6, 6-3.
In January 1996 Seles won her fourth Australian Open, beating Anke
Huber in the final. But this was to be her last Grand Slam title. As
time went on, it became clear that the psycholgical effects of the
stabbing incident still weighed very heavily on Seles, and she struggled
to recapture her best form on a regular basis. Her difficulties were
compounded by having to cope with her father and long-term coach Karolj
being stricken by cancer, and eventually passing away in 1998. Seles
was runner-up at the US Open to Graf again in 1996. Her last Grand
Slam final came at the French Open in 1998 (a few weeks after her father's
death), when she lost to Sánchez Vicario.
After becoming a US citizen, Seles helped the US team win the Fed
Cup in 1996 and 2000. She also won a Bronze Medal at the 2000 Olympic
Games in Sydney.
After winning 53 career titles up to 2003, Seles sustained a nagging
foot injury that sidelined her from the tour. In February 2005, she
played two exhibition matches in New Zealand against Martina Navrátilová.
Although Seles lost both matches, she played competitively and was
reportedly free from pain in her problematic foot. It is expected that
she may return to the tour some time in 2005.
In many people's mind, Seles's achievements during her career make
her one of the all-time great woman tennis players. However there will
always be the question of how much more she might have achieved had
she not been stabbed by a crazed German fan in 1993.