“It’s Heartbreaking”: World No.5 Anisimova Breaks Silence on 25-Year-Old’s Shock Retirement
Amanda Anisimova responds to Destanee Aiava’s explosive exit—but admits she doesn’t have all the answers
February 17, 2026 | 4 min read
DUBAI — The tennis world is still reeling from Destanee Aiava’s explosive retirement statement—and now one of the WTA’s biggest stars has weighed in.
World No. 5 Amanda Anisimova addressed Aiava’s bombshell accusations during press conferences at the Dubai Tennis Championships, calling the situation “heartbreaking” while admitting she lacks the full context of her fellow player’s experience.
Aiava, 25, announced her retirement earlier this week in a scathing social media post that didn’t hold back:
| Accusation | Aiava’s Words |
|---|---|
| The sport itself | “A toxic boyfriend” |
| Tennis culture | “Racist, misogynistic, homophobic and hostile” |
| Gamblers | “Death threats” |
| Fans | “Commenting on my body, my career” |
| The establishment | “Hides behind so-called class and gentlemanly values” |
The Australian, who reached a career-high ranking of No. 147, concluded that tennis had damaged her health, family relationships, and self-worth .
Asked about Aiava’s post in Dubai, Anisimova chose her words carefully—balancing empathy with honesty about her own limitations.
“I would say that’s tough for me to answer. Obviously, the post was disheartening, and it was sad to read.”
The 24-year-old American, who herself took a mental health break from tennis in 2023, acknowledged she doesn’t have the full picture.
“I personally don’t know her story. I don’t know her that well. I’m not really sure what she was talking about in that aspect. I don’t know if she was talking more about the reactions she received on social media or people in tennis.
“I just don’t know enough in detail to be able to answer that question.”
Then came the emotional core of her response:
“At the end of the day it is heartbreaking she had that experience. Hopefully, maybe she’ll change her mind and have a restart in tennis. You never know.”
Who Is Destanee Aiava?
| Career Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Turned pro | 2017 (age 17) |
| Grand Slam debut | 2017 Australian Open (wildcard) |
| Career-high singles | No. 147 |
| WTA Challenger title | 2025 Birmingham Open (with Cristina Bucsa) |
| ITF Circuit titles | 24 (singles + doubles) |
| Final tournament | 2026 Australian Open |
Aiava’s journey began with promise—she played an exhibition match with Steffi Graf as a junior and won the U18 Girls’ Australian Championships in 2016 to earn her Australian Open wildcard .
Her best Grand Slam results came in 2024 and 2025, reaching the second round of doubles and singles respectively at Melbourne Park .
Aiava’s retirement has reignited debates the sport often prefers to avoid:
| Issue | Context |
|---|---|
| Racism in tennis | Players of color have spoken out before; little systemic change |
| Body-shaming | Female players routinely face scrutiny over appearance |
| Gambling abuse | Medvedev, Kyrgios, others have highlighted death threats from bettors |
| Mental health | Osaka, Badosa, Anisimova herself have taken breaks |
| “Classy” facade | Does tradition mask deeper problems? |
Anisimova’s own history adds weight to her words. In 2023, she stepped away from tennis for several months, citing burnout and mental health struggles—making her uniquely positioned to understand what Aiava might be feeling .
The American is in Dubai preparing for her first match since retiring from her opener at the Qatar Open. She was scheduled to face Barbora Krejcikova in the second round, but the Czech’s withdrawal means Anisimova advances directly to the Round of 16, where she’ll meet Janice Tjen .
For Aiava, the future is uncertain. Her statement suggested she’s done with tennis—but Anisimova’s hope for a “restart” reflects a sentiment shared by many who’ve seen players return after time away.


