France’s marathon man Mahut calls time on tennis career

This photo taken on May 31, 2024, shows Frenchmen Nicolas Mahut (R) and Quentin Halys (2ndL) shaking hands with Austria's Alexander Erler (3rdL) and Lucas Miedler at the end of their men's doubles match in the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros Complex in Paris. (AFP)
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Updated 30 October 2025
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France’s marathon man Mahut calls time on tennis career

  • Mahut, 43, won five Grand Slam doubles titles in a career spanning 25 years
  • He is best known for losing the longest professional tennis match in history against American John Isner at Wimbledon

He is best known for losing the longest professional tennis match in history against American John Isner at Wimbledon in 2010

Frenchman Nicolas Mahut delivered an emotional farewell to professional tennis after his doubles defeat at the Paris Masters.
Mahut, 43, won five Grand Slam doubles titles in a career spanning 25 years, but he is best known for losing the longest professional tennis match in history against American John Isner at Wimbledon in 2010.
The match lasted 11 hours and five minutes and took place over three days, with the last set alone — eight hours 11 minutes — being long enough to have broken the previous longest-match record.
Mahut bid adieu to the sport on home soil alongside Grigor Dimitrov on Tuesday, losing 6-4, 5-7, 10-4 to Hugo Nys and Edouard Roger-Vasselin.
“Being able to win Grand Slams was for me one of the best memories,” an emotional Mahut said after the match.
“That’s what I will remember,” he said. “Beyond the titles, the trophies that I may have, it’s also ultimately everything that happened in order for me to achieve those trophies and victories.”
“It’s all the doubts, the questioning, the mistakes I made. That is ultimately what makes a career rich and mine is very rich in that regard.”
Asked about his record-setting match with Isner, Mahut said: “I now enjoy talking about that match because it was a crazy experience. It brought me a lot as a player and as a man.” (


Serena Williams says she is not coming back to tennis

Updated 03 December 2025
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Serena Williams says she is not coming back to tennis

  • The 44-year-old Williams, one of the greats of the game, has not competed since bidding farewell at the 2022 US Open.

Serena Williams threw cold water on the idea that she might be preparing to return to tennis, writing on social media Tuesday that she is “NOT coming back,” after a spokesman for the International Tennis Integrity Agency  said the 23-time Grand Slam champion had registered with the sport’s drug-testing body.
That is the first step that would be required by a player seeking to come out of retirement.
The 44-year-old Williams, one of the greats of the game, has not competed since bidding farewell at the 2022 US Open. At the time, Williams said she didn’t want to use the word “retiring” and instead declared that she was “evolving” away from tennis.
It was not clear when or where — or even if — Williams actually will play again, and she later posted: “Omg yall I’m NOT coming back. This wildfire is crazy.”
Her agent did not immediately return a request for comment.
In a statement emailed to The Associated Press, US Tennis Association spokesman Brendan McIntire said: “We are aware that Serena has filed the necessary paperwork with the International Tennis Integrity Agency to reenter the International Registered Testing Pool. If Serena decides to return and compete at the professional level, together with her fans, we will enthusiastically welcome the return of one of the greatest champions in the history of our sport.”
Williams was one of the biggest stars of any sport, a dominant talent on the court and still someone drawing attention away from it. If she were to end up returning to the tour, it would be a significant story line, of course.
Her decision to place her name back in the testing pool with the ITIA, which oversees anti-doping and anti-corruption efforts, was first reported by Bounces.
“She is on the list and back in the testing pool,” ITIA spokesman Adrian Bassett wrote to the AP on Tuesday.
Athletes returning to testing need to provide information on their whereabouts — details on their location when they are not at an official event and times when they are available to give samples. Someone who retires while they are on the list and later comes back needs to be available for testing for six months before they are allowed to return to competition.
Williams’ older sister, Venus, returned to competition this July at age 45 after nearly 1 1/2 years away from the tour; she never had announced her retirement. At the US Open, Venus became the oldest player to play singles at the American Grand Slam tournament since 1981.
When Venus, a seven-time major singles champion, came back at the DC Open, she spoke about wishing Serena would join her back on tour. They claimed 14 Grand Slam doubles titles as a pair.
“I keep saying to my team: The only thing that would make this better is if she was here. Like, we always did everything together, so of course I miss her,” Venus said at the time when asked about a video on social media that showed Serena swinging a racket. “But if she comes back, I’m sure she’ll let y’all know.”