Stan Wawrinka has announced that this season will be his last, and with that, tennis prepares to say goodbye to one of its most unforgettable figures. Not just a champion. Not just a Hall of Famer. But a reminder of what persistence, belief, and self-reinvention can still achieve in the most unforgiving era the sport has ever known.
This is a tribute. And it feels earned.
Let’s talk tennis.

The Determination That Defined a Career
Stan played in an era dominated almost entirely by three names. More than 60 Grand Slam titles were absorbed by Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic, leaving precious little oxygen for anyone else. Only two players truly broke through that ceiling. Andy Murray and Stan Wawrinka.
What separates Stan is how he did it.
He didn’t sneak a major. He didn’t catch lightning once. At his peak, Stan became a genuine big-match monster, capable of staring down Djokovic and Nadal on the sport’s biggest stages and beating them at full strength. When Stanimal arrived, fear followed. Those were not fluke wins. Those were earned.
It didn’t come easily. Early in his career, Stan was good but incomplete. His forehand needed bite. His fitness needed refinement. His mental toughness needed steel. He addressed every weakness, methodically, year after year, until the pieces finally locked into place. That journey, more than the trophies, is what makes his legacy special.
The Backhand That Changed the Conversation
You cannot talk about Stan without talking about that backhand.
Raw. Violent. Technically pristine. Where Federer’s one-hander was poetry, Stan’s was a sledgehammer. A bulldozer that flattened opponents and rewrote what was possible with a one-handed backhand in the modern power era.
Even now, at 40, players do not target it. That alone tells you everything. Watching him push Taylor Fritz deep into a fourth set at the Australian Open, becoming the oldest man to reach the third round, was a masterclass in timing, balance, and fearless commitment. More recently, pushing Félix Auger-Aliassime to tight sets showed the weapon is still very real.
Stan didn’t just preserve the one-hander. He legitimized it.
Love for the Game, Pure and Simple
Stan’s longevity might be the most admirable part of all.
Multiple knee surgeries in his mid-30s would have ended most careers quietly. Instead, Stan came back. He plays Challengers. He plays 250s. He competes wherever the game takes him, with zero concern for ego or ranking.
Is there anything wrong with being around No. 100 in the world at age 40? Not when you’re still inspiring everyone watching. Stan plays because he loves tennis. That authenticity is rare, and it resonates.
More Than Results: A Cultural Footprint
Stan’s impact extends beyond match results.
The shorts. The unapologetic fashion choices. The iconic finger-to-the-temple celebration reminding everyone that tennis is as much about thinking as hitting. These weren’t marketing decisions. They were simply Stan being Stan.
And that’s the point.
He showed that you don’t need to fit a mold to belong. You need to believe, adapt, and commit fully to who you are. Stan solved problems on court with his mind as much as his racket, and that evolution is what turned a talented pro into a legend.

First Ball Forehand Match Point
Stan Wawrinka didn’t just win majors. He earned respect, inspired belief, and left the game better than he found it. Tennis will miss Stanimal. And it should.
Source: Publicly available ATP reporting and season coverage.
