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Posted: Tuesday April 28, 2009 8:43PM; Updated: Wednesday April 29, 2009 12:43AM

Coria announces retirement at 27

Story Highlights

Guillermo Coria won nine titles and was once ranked No. 3 in the world

Correia, a clay-court specialist, lost in the final of the 2004 French Open

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Guillermo Coria won nine ATP singles titles and reached the French Open final in 2004.
Julian Finney/Getty Images

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -- Former French Open finalist Guillermo Coria retired from tennis at age 27 on Tuesday.

Coria, a finalist for Roland Garros in 2004 and formerly ranked third in the world, said he had been considering stepping down from the sport for months.

"I didn't feel like competing anymore," Coria said in statements published on the Argentine Tennis Association's Web site. "I've made the decision I will not play again."

Coria won nine titles during his career, reaching his peak in 2004, when he lost in the final of the Roland Garros to Gaston Gaudio, catapulting him to third in the world rankings.

Coria's decline began a year later after he won the Umag tournament -- his last title.

"In 2005 I began to feel less and less like competing," he said. "My passion just wasn't the same and it's impossible to do things well when it's like that. In this sport, you have to be at 100 percent," added Coria, who is currently ranked 672.

Coria turned pro in 2000 at age 18, and was suspended in 2001 for two years. But the ATP reduced the penalty to seven months after a lab test showed the multivitamin he ingested was tainted with steroids. In June 2007, after claiming he'd lost a potential $10 million in earnings, Coria settled a lawsuit with the New Jersey-based maker of the multivitamin.

In 2003 he won three tournaments in three weeks, and by the end he was South America's highest-ranked player. He also was the first Argentine in 21 years to reach the season-ending Masters Cup.

Coria's last tournament was in March at a challenger in Bangkok, his first event in eight months. He lost in the first round.

"I'm very happy with the decision I've taken," he said, "since I have new projects and I will be able to spend more time with my family."

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

 
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