Collins climbed the ranks until she was once America’s top female player and No. 7 in the world. But for every success, she suffered a setback. The chronic ache in her joints, she later learned, was rheumatoid arthritis. Doctors also diagnosed her with endometriosis, a painful condition where uterine-like tissue grows outside the uterus. That diagnosis led to surgery.
Collins wants to start a family, but the health challenges, the grind of an 11-month season and the frequent international travel complicate that goal.
“I think it is important for all of us, at the bare minimum, to be able to have some time at home and to be able to live somewhat of a normal life,” she said. “And it’s nearly impossible for tennis players.”
So, in January, at age 30, she announced 2024 would be her final year on tour.
Just Being Herself
Since that announcement, Collins has been playing her best tennis. She’s won two WTA tournaments this year, doubling her haul from the prior nine years. She willed her way deep into Wimbledon with gritty play and gutsy comebacks. But if you ask her whether the retirement decision somehow freed her to play better, well, she’s not a fan of that question.
“There’s been such a disregard for the hard work that I’ve put into the course of my career,” she said. “Things haven’t clicked for me previously, consistently, and things are clicking for me now. It’s been so frustrating in a sense because I feel like I have to justify my success. I’ve worked so hard since I was 7 years old for this. And I feel like when this question gets brought up, it’s kind of like, ‘Oh, like you’re retiring. It must be so easy to have some success because it’s your last year.’ It doesn’t really work like that.”