The three-time Wimbledon champion has opened up on his time in jail
Tennis legend Boris Becker has opened up on his time in prison, admitting that he “literally lost everything” and “95 per cent” of his former inner circle are now “gone”.
In 2022, the six-time Grand Slam champion was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail for hiding £2.5 million worth of assets and loans to avoid paying debts, having been declared bankrupt five years earlier. He was released from prison after serving eight months of his sentence and was deported from the UK following his release.
Under the terms of his deportation order, he is currently barred from entering the UK but has revealed he is in negotiations with the Home Office to have the ban overturned.
While a long-time pundit on the BBC’s coverage of Wimbledon – a tournament where he won the men’s singles title on three occasions – the 58-year-old was left out of the broadcaster’s punditry line-up last year while banned.
Having also decided not to return to his homeland of Germany following his deportation, Becker has now settled in Italy, living in Milan with his third wife, Lilian, and their seven-month-old daughter, Zoe, while returning to punditry work for the likes of Sky Italia.
In a new interview with the Telegraph, he has opened up on his eight months in prison and the impact that his time inside has had on his life following his release.
“When you are incarcerated, you literally lose everything,” he said. “All that is left is your personality, your character. So you have to dig down inside to ask, ‘OK, who am I? Is this going to kill me, or is this going to make me stronger?’
“Each month, it gets a little bit better, you get closer to yourself. You think, ‘What went wrong for me to end up in Wandsworth?’ You have to be convinced you will survive. And once you do, the question is ‘What do I do when I get out?’
“That’s why the comeback happened so quickly, because I was already preparing while inside. I wasn’t whining, I wasn’t making other people responsible for my mistakes. I said, ‘OK, I f****d up’.
“With the help of my wife and a very small group of people, I started to select who was with me, who was not with me. What would be my first move, my third move? It becomes like a really long, good chess game.”
While he has been supported by Lilian and close confidants, including Novak Djokovic, Becker admits that “90 per cent of [his] former circle is gone”.
“Probably even 95 per cent,” he added. “That doesn’t mean I don’t say hello – I see their numbers and I write them a friendly ‘No’.
“I find [people] look at me and shake their head, saying, ‘We can’t believe you’re back. How did you do it?’ And then I think to myself, ‘How should I take this? Are you happy for me or not?’ It’s the response I see the most.
“Both privately and professionally, people can’t believe that I’m back in life, back in business, back in freedom.”
Becker has now been absent from four successive Wimbledon championships and admits that SW19 is what he misses most while banned from the UK, describing it as his “birthplace”.
“I don’t think I miss London, but I miss Wimbledon,” he explained. “It’s my birthplace, in a sense.
“I feel so close to the club, to the courts. I have a story on every court, in every corner, in the locker room, in the car park. I probably know Wimbledon better than anyone else alive.”

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