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05-Dec-07:
End of the road for Ricketts
Australia's Anthony Ricketts has announced his retirement from the
men's professional World Tour having been unable to return to full
fitness following surgery to repair cartilage damage to his right
knee.
In a professional playing career spanning over ten years, the 28
year-old former World No.3 from Sydney was an Australian Institute
of Sport Scholarship holder since 1995, he won Silver Medals at
consecutive Commonwealth Games, helped Australia to win the Men's
World Team Championships, and extended his PSA World Tour haul to
nine titles, from seventeen final appearances, including the
prestigious Tournament of Champions, Super Series Finals and British
Open.
Renowned for his aggressive and uncompromising style of play,
Ricketts enjoyed an impressive run of form at the beginning of the
year which saw him win the Virginia Pro Championships as well as
being runner-up at the Windy City Open in Chicago and Tournament of
Champions in New York.
However, the two-time Australian Open Champion has spent most of
2007 recovering from his fifth operation to his right knee, and
following an extensive rehabilitation programme, he has eventually
conceded the symptoms experienced over recent years have worsened to
the point were he can no longer continue to compete professionally.
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19 finals in 9 years
SquashInfo |
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"I
have had a wonderful time playing on the World Tour since competing
in the 1996 World Junior Championships in Cairo and my announcement
comes with great disappointment and immense sadness.
"I certainly felt I had many good years ahead of me and was
confident I would be able to continue to challenge for the sport's
major titles. The medical teams who have supported me at the
Australian Institute of Sport have helped me enormously throughout
my career with my knee injury, but at this point, after so much
damage to the joint, they could not get me back on court and
recommended retirement. The continued pain in my knee meant there
was no other decision to be made, professional squash was no longer
an option.
"I
am very proud of the standards I've set myself throughout my career
and I have been very fortunate to have received invaluable help and
support from so many people, all of whom have given so much of
themselves to help me achieve my goals as a professional squash
player. I will obviously thank everybody privately and individually,
but it is impossible not to acknowledge the people who have helped
me achieve what I have.
"Geoff Roberts in Sydney has been my mentor from the start and will
continue to be so, whatever path I decide to take. I have been
privileged to receive the support of Squash Australia and the
Australian Institute of Sport who have given me the opportunity to
work with the very best coaches, including Geoff Hunt, Rodney Martin
and more recently Byron Davis, as well as receiving the best medical
support from Craig Purdam and Shane Lemcke, who have always given me
confidence that I would be able to get back on court and compete to
a standard I aspire to.
"I
am indebted to Mike Johnson who has guided my playing career whilst
based in the UK and for everything he has done in helping me achieve
my goals.
"Off-court, I am grateful for the belief and confidence shown in me
by Paul Walters, particularly when I was a young professional and
there was no guarantee of success, and to my sponsor Wilson, whose
rackets, footwear and clothing have made a crucial difference to my
performance.
"The life of a touring professional can often be a lonely one and I
feel privileged to have enjoyed the friendship of so many players
who I have competed with and against, as well as everyone in England
who have made me feel so welcome over the past ten years - without
their warm and genuine hospitality, my squash career would have been
very lonely and no-where near as enjoyable.
"Finally, my family and girlfriend Shelley (Kitchen) cannot be
thanked enough and it is unfortunate that the ones you care for the
most have to be the ones who share the disappointments and
frustrations that come with being an athlete!"
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"The Australian
Institute of Sport has been a proud contributor to the career of
Anthony Ricketts for the past decade.
"Sadly injury has cut his career short but we thank him for being a
wonderful ambassador for the AIS and squash and wish him well in
retirement."

AIS Director |
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"It is with real
sadness that I hear the news of Anthony's retirement from the
professional game. This young man has been a model member of the PSA
and has played his squash with 100% commitment.
"It is possibly because of Anthony's huge commitment to his training
regimes that wear and tear has caught up with his body forcing him
to make this decision at this time. He has the titles behind him and
he can always be proud of the achievements he gained in his time as
a professional.
"Whilst he will be missed from the circuit I hope we shall continue
to see Anthony within squash circles. PSA wishes him the best of
luck in his next ventures."

PSA |
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"Anthony is a great
loss to Australia's national team as he has been a strong and
consistent performer at representative level.
"He was twice selected in Australian teams to compete in the
Commonwealth Games; 2002 in Manchester and 2006 in Melbourne where
he medalled in both events and for Australia's Team in the World
Teams Championships in 2003 and 2005, the last of which Anthony was
named captain of the Australian team.
"We are grateful for his fantastic contribution and wish him well
for the future."

Squash Australia |
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"Very few professional
players have been able to match Anthony's level of intensity and
desire to be the best. His unflinching approach has won him many
admirers and his honesty and sincerity many friends.
"Anthony is one of the most professional and successful players that
we have represented, but above everything else he has been a close
and loyal friend. His injury has undoubtedly robbed him of many
future titles which make it even more poignant that he should have
won the British Open in 2005, a title that as a proud Australian, he
treasured above all others.
"It was a privilege to share his triumph on that day and to share a
valued friendship which will continue regardless of which direction
his career now takes him."

Manager |
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"I have seen Anthony
develop over a 12 year period from a young promising junior to a one
of the world's best professional players.
"He always had a fantastic work ethic putting everything into his
training sessions to become perhaps the fittest player I have seen
and earning him the nickname "The Machine."
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