Boris Becker hints at Wimbledon return after 'working hard with the authorities' | Tennis | Sport




Boris Becker has hinted at a possible Wimbledon return, after the legendary tennis ace missed the previous two championships because of a prison sentence. The three-time Wimbledon winner spent eight months of a two-and-a-half-year sentence behind bars, but has revealed he hopes to be back in SW19 for the 2025 edition.

Becker was sent to prison for bankruptcy offences in April 2022, but was released in December of the same year. As a result, the German was handed a travel ban by the UK authorities and hasn’t been present at Wimbledon ever since - something he hopes to change next year.

Speaking about his presence at the tournament, Becker revealed: “I very much hope so. Not this year but we’re working on 2025.

“It’s been my favourite tournament as a player, coach and commentator. It’s unique, you can’t compare it. I lived in Wimbledon for a long time so I’m working hard with the authorities to have all the applications ready to be back for next year.”

Becker was a familiar face in the BBC’s commentary box, and when quizzed on whether he’ll return as a pundit, Becker replied by saying: “I hope so.”

The length of Becker’s travel ban has never been revealed. As per The Guardian, a Home Office spokesperson said in April 2023: “Any foreign national who has been convicted of a crime and deported is prohibited from returning for as long as the deportation order made against them remains in force.”

It has now been over a year since Becker was released from prison, but the nine-time Grand Slam winner believes the experience fundamentally changed him. Speaking last year, he told BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast: “Whoever says that prison life isn’t hard and isn’t difficult, I think is lying. It was a very brutal … a very, very different experience to what you see in the movies, what you’ve heard from stories.

“You fight every day for survival. Quickly, you have to surround yourself with the tough boys, as I would call it, because you need protection. I’m a survivor; I’m a tough cookie. I’ve taken the incarceration, but I’ve also taken the glory and if anything this made me a stronger, better man.”

He added: “If anything, it certainly humbled me. It certainly made me realise that whether you’re called Boris Becker or Paul Smith, if you break the law, you get convicted and you get incarcerated; that goes for everybody.”



Source link

Posted: 2024-04-22 00:16:38

Pro-Palestine marches could be banned after police slammed | UK | News
 



... Read More

French far-Right slam Emmanuel Macron's 'alliance of dishonour' | World | News
 



... Read More

As Ugandan court upholds anti-gay law, activists fear rising hatred and violence
 



... Read More

Canadian Olympic Committee joins Centre for Sport and Human Rights
 



... Read More

Senior Hezbollah commander reportedly killed by Israeli strike as tensions rise in Lebanon
 



... Read More

Drivers could fail MOT test before entering garage due to common issue 
 



... Read More

Real reason Prince Harry and Meghan won't attend Trooping the Colour | Royal | News
 



... Read More

State Champs: 'We had to Google our lyrics for The Finer Things show' | Music | Entertainment
 



... Read More