Groth to Retire after Oz

marc45

G.O.A.T.
Sam Groth to retire after next year’s Australian Open

Leo Schlink, Herald Sun

SAM Groth will retire after January’s Australian Open.

An Olympian, Davis Cup mainstay and John Newcombe medallist, Groth will bow out after the January 15-28 event, ending a 13-year career.

Citing wilting motivation, the 30-year-old said he had increasingly struggled “with the whole life on the tour thing.”

“It’s been something I’ve been thinking about since Wimbledon,” Groth said.

“I went to Newport, a tournament I’ve done really well at in the past. I ‘qualied’, won a round and I was playing John Isner on centre court and part of me just really didn’t want to be there.

800d9f8262d6e32bb1a047d023929475

Sam Groth took his game to another level when playing Davis Cup.

“My issue has never been competing.

“Before I got to 53 in the world, my issue was doing enough work and all those sorts of things.

“That became the easy part at the end.

“But getting out and competing and being away from home became tough.”

A fearsome serve-volleyer, Groth has been plagued with injury since reaching a career-high No 53 in 2015.

789c7127b35936146ab6bf17c64063b9

Sam Groth with the Davis Cup team.

His feat that season to re-emerge from virtual retirement after shoulder surgery and a suburban AFL stint with Vermont is now part of Australian tennis folklore.

The right-hander upstaged grand slam champion Sam Stosur, a triple Newcombe medallist, to succeed Hewitt as Australia’s premier player in 2015.

“Everybody knew my story. I got injured, had a year off and came back,” Groth said.

“Now it’s over, I can reflect on that properly — 2015 was a pretty amazing year.

“We made semis of Davis Cup, that unbelievable quarter-final in Darwin was one of my greatest feelings.

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Groth in Melbourne where he’ll play his last tournament. Picture: Alex Coppel.

“I played centre court at Wimbledon, made third round at the Australian and topped off by the Newcombe Medal.


“To look back on that, I’m very happy and content to look back on that and makes it easier to walk away.”

But not before one final — and almost certainly explosive — hurrah.

“I’m excited because it’s going to be the closing of this book and the start of the new chapter,” Groth said.

“Hopefully I can find something I really enjoy doing again.

“I’m a passionate, competitive person so hopefully I can do something I’m passionate about.”
 
I remember that match between him and Federer at Wimbledon 2015. He had a massive serve, I was surprised at how Fed handled it.
 
Doing something that fellow Aussies Tomic and Kyrgios (who clearly lack motivation) should do.

Those guys are making more money than Groth. It's obvious to continue on the tour while the money is still coming in.

Groth was a pretty terrible player for ATP level but at least he always gave his best. I made a thread the other week saying tomic/kyrgios could learn from that, guys who have twice his talent
 
Sam Groth to retire after next year’s Australian Open

Citing wilting motivation, the 30-year-old said he had increasingly struggled “with the whole life on the tour thing.”

“I went to Newport, a tournament I’ve done really well at in the past. I ‘qualied’, won a round and I was playing John Isner on centre court and part of me just really didn’t want to be there.

One can totally understand the poor guy’s demotivation and boredom.
Playing Isner is more than anyone could take.
 
He's really only started being a consistent top 100-200 player the last 2.5 years

Seems a shame to stop now, since he spent so much time getting here and he's still healthy

Big servers can have long careers and get better in their 30's, like karlovic, muller, mahut
 
Has he even made enough money to retire?

Irrespective of his financial position having a job is probably better for him than contributing nothing for the next 50 years. He's probably got enough to live a decent lifestyle while he educates himself in another field, if he doesn't want to coach tennis.
 
Sam Groth to retire after next year’s Australian Open

Leo Schlink, Herald Sun

SAM Groth will retire after January’s Australian Open.

An Olympian, Davis Cup mainstay and John Newcombe medallist, Groth will bow out after the January 15-28 event, ending a 13-year career.

Citing wilting motivation, the 30-year-old said he had increasingly struggled “with the whole life on the tour thing.”

“It’s been something I’ve been thinking about since Wimbledon,” Groth said.

“I went to Newport, a tournament I’ve done really well at in the past. I ‘qualied’, won a round and I was playing John Isner on centre court and part of me just really didn’t want to be there.

800d9f8262d6e32bb1a047d023929475

Sam Groth took his game to another level when playing Davis Cup.

“My issue has never been competing.

“Before I got to 53 in the world, my issue was doing enough work and all those sorts of things.

“That became the easy part at the end.

“But getting out and competing and being away from home became tough.”

A fearsome serve-volleyer, Groth has been plagued with injury since reaching a career-high No 53 in 2015.

789c7127b35936146ab6bf17c64063b9

Sam Groth with the Davis Cup team.

His feat that season to re-emerge from virtual retirement after shoulder surgery and a suburban AFL stint with Vermont is now part of Australian tennis folklore.

The right-hander upstaged grand slam champion Sam Stosur, a triple Newcombe medallist, to succeed Hewitt as Australia’s premier player in 2015.

“Everybody knew my story. I got injured, had a year off and came back,” Groth said.

“Now it’s over, I can reflect on that properly — 2015 was a pretty amazing year.

“We made semis of Davis Cup, that unbelievable quarter-final in Darwin was one of my greatest feelings.

5a1dc5780ebe5e1b09362cdf747595bd

Groth in Melbourne where he’ll play his last tournament. Picture: Alex Coppel.

“I played centre court at Wimbledon, made third round at the Australian and topped off by the Newcombe Medal.


“To look back on that, I’m very happy and content to look back on that and makes it easier to walk away.”

But not before one final — and almost certainly explosive — hurrah.

“I’m excited because it’s going to be the closing of this book and the start of the new chapter,” Groth said.

“Hopefully I can find something I really enjoy doing again.

“I’m a passionate, competitive person so hopefully I can do something I’m passionate about.”
PS
"I played Rafael Nadal at Roland Garros"
 
Having seen him lose at qualies at IW and early in a challenger at Tiburon both in 2017, no surprise. If you didn't know he once had the fastest serve ever ...
 
man is it an aussie thing? its like lleyton sucked every inch of motivation from the country even for years to come

Groth has done fine though. Lack of motivation is normal for a guy like him that's already achieved his potential. Not normal is Tomic and Kyrgios who are both wasting at least some potential and are both lazy bums by ATP professional standards.
 
Groth has done fine though. Lack of motivation is normal for a guy like him that's already achieved his potential. Not normal is Tomic and Kyrgios who are both wasting at least some potential and are both lazy bums by ATP professional standards.

i slightly disagree on his potential, maybe if he had drop some weight he could have been able to do more, he is already a big guy, does not help that also he is not on the body fat % that maybe he could achieve to move better and i dont say that to mock him or anything like that, i like that player
 
i slightly disagree on his potential, maybe if he had drop some weight he could have been able to do more, he is already a big guy, does not help that also he is not on the body fat % that maybe he could achieve to move better and i dont say that to mock him or anything like that, i like that player

Well I'm more talking about him just trying his best on court unlike Tomic and Kygios in general. Maybe he could've done ever so slightly better than a career high of 53, but to my knowledge he has never blatantly tanked like either of the aforementioned two.
 
He should wait to retire until the day his serve speed record is broken.
Once that happens, he will disappear from all radars.
 
He will be remembered for his record breaking serve of 163km/hr. Shocking net play for someone with such a massive serve.
 
Nothing but respect. Guy was barely a tennis player at one point but through sheer determination and hard work got into top 100, played on some of the sport's grandest stages, and enjoyed a number of special wins

Would love to see him make R4 in Melbourne, but R64 is a more realistic goal
 
How could it surprise you...Fed has been destroying guys with big serves like its nothing for about 20 years on tour now.
Probably because Groth managed to actually win a set off Federer at the 2015 Wimbledon tournament. He was the only player to do so at the tournament besides from Djokovic in the final. Meaning that players who Fed faced: Dzumhur, Querrey, Bautista Agut, Simon and Murray all couldn't take a set yet Sam Groth could? Surprising.
 
The only way that serve speed record will be broken is if someone can find the faulty gun that recorded it and put it back into use.
I see. So serve speed records can be questionable?
Searching data, I found that Groth’s record is from a challenger event (263 km/h)
Isner has the record at Davis Cup (253 km/h)
Raonic at ATP tournaments (250 km/h)
Taylor Dent (Wimbledon 2010) has it at Grand Slams at 148 mph = 238 km/h
Interesting to note that higher the importance of the event, the fastest serve record is lower.
 
Sam Groth to retire after next year’s Australian Open

Leo Schlink, Herald Sun

SAM Groth will retire after January’s Australian Open.

An Olympian, Davis Cup mainstay and John Newcombe medallist, Groth will bow out after the January 15-28 event, ending a 13-year career.

Citing wilting motivation, the 30-year-old said he had increasingly struggled “with the whole life on the tour thing.”

“It’s been something I’ve been thinking about since Wimbledon,” Groth said.

“I went to Newport, a tournament I’ve done really well at in the past. I ‘qualied’, won a round and I was playing John Isner on centre court and part of me just really didn’t want to be there.

800d9f8262d6e32bb1a047d023929475

Sam Groth took his game to another level when playing Davis Cup.

“My issue has never been competing.

“Before I got to 53 in the world, my issue was doing enough work and all those sorts of things.

“That became the easy part at the end.

“But getting out and competing and being away from home became tough.”

A fearsome serve-volleyer, Groth has been plagued with injury since reaching a career-high No 53 in 2015.

789c7127b35936146ab6bf17c64063b9

Sam Groth with the Davis Cup team.

His feat that season to re-emerge from virtual retirement after shoulder surgery and a suburban AFL stint with Vermont is now part of Australian tennis folklore.

The right-hander upstaged grand slam champion Sam Stosur, a triple Newcombe medallist, to succeed Hewitt as Australia’s premier player in 2015.

“Everybody knew my story. I got injured, had a year off and came back,” Groth said.

“Now it’s over, I can reflect on that properly — 2015 was a pretty amazing year.

“We made semis of Davis Cup, that unbelievable quarter-final in Darwin was one of my greatest feelings.

5a1dc5780ebe5e1b09362cdf747595bd

Groth in Melbourne where he’ll play his last tournament. Picture: Alex Coppel.

“I played centre court at Wimbledon, made third round at the Australian and topped off by the Newcombe Medal.


“To look back on that, I’m very happy and content to look back on that and makes it easier to walk away.”

But not before one final — and almost certainly explosive — hurrah.

“I’m excited because it’s going to be the closing of this book and the start of the new chapter,” Groth said.

“Hopefully I can find something I really enjoy doing again.

“I’m a passionate, competitive person so hopefully I can do something I’m passionate about.”
A bit of a surprise for me. Groth was an exciting guy to watch, and I'll miss him raining down 163mph aces on the tour. I hope he enjoys his retirement as much as we enjoyed seeing him on tour.
 
A bit of a surprise for me. Groth was an exciting guy to watch, and I'll miss him raining down 163mph aces on the tour. I hope he enjoys his retirement as much as we enjoyed seeing him on tour.
What was precisely exciting about him, apart from his somewhat disputed serve speed record?
 
I saw the man play in the Davis Cup semi-final in 2015 in Glasgow.

The man's serve was something to admire.

The man served his nation well, and had a reasonable career.

I wish the man all the best in his tennis retirement, and hope that he finds something he can be equally passionate about moving forwards.
 
All serves should be have a new unit of measurement called the Groth.

1 gR = 2.63kmh
100 gR = 263kmh etc.

At least he'll have several slams under his belt after he wins AO18, so he'll have a great career to look back on.
 
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