
September 25, 2006 - 1:19PM
Andre Agassi has picked up a tennis racquet only once since he played
his final competitive match at the US Open earlier this month.
"I hit for 30 minutes with my wife," he said, "because
she wanted some exercise."
The eight-time Grand Slam champion might be enjoying the chance to
stay away from the courts, but it sure didn't take him long to find
something else to do with his new spare time.
Three weeks after closing his 21-year professional tennis career,
Agassi is entering a partnership with Steve Case's luxury vacation
club, Exclusive Resorts.
"In tennis ... you work, you train and all that so that you can
maybe add something to somebody's life for those couple of hours,"
Agassi said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press, "and
this is a great way of channeling that desire that I have to affect
somebody for longer than that."
The 36-year-old Agassi and his wife, former tennis star Steffi Graf,
have two children.
"I feel like I'm really connected to what a family's looking
for on vacation. When they decide to take time together, they're not
looking to do things separately - they're looking to connect stronger
with each other and also themselves," Agassi said. "It's
not just about relaxing. It's about rejuvenating. It's about re-energising
as well."
Agassi's arrangement with Exclusive Resorts will be announced formally
on Monday.
Case, the America Online co-founder, bought Exclusive Resorts three
years ago. The group has about 2,400 members, who each pay at least
$US225,000 ($A300,000) for access to nearly 300 residences in North
America, the Caribbean and Europe.
Agassi will help identify and develop new real estate for the club,
and "bring more of a family centered approach" to the Agassi-Graf
Tennis and Fitness Centers that will be built at various sites, Case
said.
"We first started talking about this a number of months ago,"
Case said. "He was trying to figure out where to focus his time
and energy and passion when he retired from tennis."
During the U.S. Open, Agassi needed a series of injections to deal
with the pain of playing with an irritated sciatic nerve. But Agassi
said his back is feeling better now that he's not "trying to
mix it up with 20-year-olds. Hopefully, there's a good chance I can
leave that in the past, feeling the way I felt at times.
"In everyday life, I've been good. It's taken a few weeks, but
you wouldn't know I'm 36 right now."
It's too early to tell if retirement suits him - "You've got
to ask me that in a few months, really," Agassi said - in part
because he's been used to pretty much shutting things down after the
U.S. Open each season.
He plans to stay involved in philanthropic work that began during
his playing career. His foundation, which benefits children in need,
holds its 11th annual fundraising event Oct. 7.
"I just hope that the next 20 years of my life eclipse the last
20 years. That's what I hope for," Agassi said. "I hope
the impact I have can only continue to grow, through my foundation,
through meeting the needs, and giving people a platform to really
have their lives affected."
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Sport/Agassi-gets-moving-on-life-after-tennis/2006/09/25/1159036452211.html