As every high school coach and gym teacher likes to point out: There’s no I in team.
In Dominic Thiem, there is an I … but not an ego.
As fine a player as Austria has produced, he achieved plenty. But 30-year-old Thiem—who played his last major match Monday at the U.S. Open—might be best remembered for his modesty and amiable personality. Will Rogers said, “I never met a man I didn’t like.” In tennis, there was a corollary: No one ever met Dominic Theim and didn’t like him.
He burst on the scene as a teenager, known for zinging and flinging that one-handed backhand, and for practicing harder and longer than most others.
By his early 20s, he was embedded in the top 20, then the top 10. By his mid-20s, he was reliably in the business end of majors. His breakthrough came at the 2020 U.S. Open. Down two sets to love to Alexander Zverev in the final, Thiem won a wild and uneven five-setter. In other times, the crowd would have gone wild. Except this time, thanks to pandemic protocols, there was no crowd.
Critics would point out that Thiem won his major without having to face Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic. Spun more generously, the fact that he won his one and only major during COVID-19—with all its hurdles and distractions—says so much about his professionalism.
As if he had made a pact with the devil, Thiem was never the same player after that. It would be the last title—of any size—he would win. He struggled with injuries and, not unrelatedly, confidence.
Through it all, he remained good-natured about his fate, optimistic, realistic and never bitter or looking to shift blame. Barely 30 years old, he has decided to walk away. Not, perhaps, the end he would have chosen to author. But this was a worthy career. Not least because of the way Dominic Thiem conducted himself.
This article was originally published on www.si.com as Former Champion Dominic Thiem Says Goodbye at U.S. Open.