News

Eugenie Bouchard, who broke new ground for women’s tennis in Canada, has announced she will retire after this year’s National ...
Genie Bouchard, who lost to Petra Kvitova in the 2014 Wimbledon final, is to call time on her career at the National Bank ...
Eleven years after she exploded onto the tennis scene, Eugenie Bouchard will be retiring from tennis "where it all started." ...
Bouchard, who reached the 2014 Wimbledon final in her breakout year on the WTA Tour, will formally retire at the 2025 ...
MONTREAL - Canadian tennis player Eugenie Bouchard, who reached No. 5 in the WTA rankings in a breakout 2014 season, is ...
Genie Bouchard, who reached the Wimbledon final and two other Grand Slam semifinals in 2014, is retiring from tennis.
Bouchard burst onto the scene in 2014, reaching the Australian Open semi-finals as a 19-year-old then repeating the feat at ...
Eugenie Bouchard has decided to walk away from pro tennis as the 31-year-old Canadian accepted a wildcard into the WTA 1000 ...
Eugenie Bouchard's sisters, Beatrice and Charlotte, sent heartfelt farewell notes to the Canadian player as she announced that she would retire from tennis after the Canadian Open in Montreal.
Former Wimbledon finalist Eugenie Bouchard has announced her retirement from tennis aged 31 – just weeks after making a shock return to the sport, The Sun reports.
Eugénie Bouchard, who reached the Wimbledon final in 2014 and was ranked as high as No. 5 in the world, will play her final ...