German tennis legend Boris Becker has withdrawn a lawsuit against an ex-manager in a financial dispute, the court and his lawyer said Thursday.
Becker, 50, who is battling money woes, had earlier signalled he would sue his ex-manager Sascha Rinne.
"The lawsuit has been withdrawn," a spokeswoman for the Cologne regional court, where the case had been scheduled to be heard Friday, told AFP.
Becker's lawyer Christian-Oliver Moser told national news agency DPA that the suit had been withdrawn for "formal reasons" and that Becker still thought he was right.
He had sought 100,000 euros ($122,000) from Rinne over what the ex-champion had claimed he was entitled to because of past commercial agreements.
The red-haired German has never been far from the media limelight since he shook up the tennis world at Wimbledon in 1985.
As an unseeded player, he became the then youngest-ever male Grand Slam champion at the age of 17, defending the trophy the following year.
Nicknamed "Boom Boom" Becker for his powerful serve, he went on to win six Grand Slam trophies in all and reached world number one spot, amassing more than $25 million in prize money.
But his fortune dissipated in a series of failed investments ranging from an internet organic food firm to a Becker Tower in Dubai.
In June 2017, a London court declared him bankrupt with a debt mountain of several million euros.
Despite his money troubles, Becker remains a key player in the sporting arena, and was named the German Tennis Federation's head of men's tennis last year.
He split with former world number one Novak Djokovic in December 2016, following three successful years together, the Serb winning six of his 12 Grand Slam titles with Becker as coach.
German tennis legend Boris Becker has withdrawn a lawsuit against an ex-manager in a financial dispute, the court and his lawyer said Thursday.
Becker, 50, who is battling money woes, had earlier signalled he would sue his ex-manager Sascha Rinne.
“The lawsuit has been withdrawn,” a spokeswoman for the Cologne regional court, where the case had been scheduled to be heard Friday, told AFP.
Becker’s lawyer Christian-Oliver Moser told national news agency DPA that the suit had been withdrawn for “formal reasons” and that Becker still thought he was right.
He had sought 100,000 euros ($122,000) from Rinne over what the ex-champion had claimed he was entitled to because of past commercial agreements.
The red-haired German has never been far from the media limelight since he shook up the tennis world at Wimbledon in 1985.
As an unseeded player, he became the then youngest-ever male Grand Slam champion at the age of 17, defending the trophy the following year.
Nicknamed “Boom Boom” Becker for his powerful serve, he went on to win six Grand Slam trophies in all and reached world number one spot, amassing more than $25 million in prize money.
But his fortune dissipated in a series of failed investments ranging from an internet organic food firm to a Becker Tower in Dubai.
In June 2017, a London court declared him bankrupt with a debt mountain of several million euros.
Despite his money troubles, Becker remains a key player in the sporting arena, and was named the German Tennis Federation’s head of men’s tennis last year.
He split with former world number one Novak Djokovic in December 2016, following three successful years together, the Serb winning six of his 12 Grand Slam titles with Becker as coach.