“Turning up the first day I think maybe my body will be going in one direction towards the locker room and the practice courts but I really haven’t missed playing at all since the nine months I retired. But Wimbledon is always the most special and my favourite tournament so it will be interesting to see how I feel. “After I lost to Feliciano Lopez last year, I was asked if my decision had anything to do with the grass being slower now and favouring baseliners more but at the time I absolutely expected to be back again this year. It was when I started practicing on hard courts and getting ready for the US Open that I really started struggling with my back again and that has the effect that you can’t practice and train as hard as you want to, which has a knock on effect on your performance. Having played the majority of my career in the top 10 and top 20 I realised that perhaps I wasn’t going to be able to play as I was accustomed to. Then I looked at the other aspects of the travel and being away from the family, so with the schedule of the Davis Cup being at Wimbledon it all fell into place quite nicely. "I always thought my last match would be at Wimbledon so to play as well as I did and win the tie and get Great Britain back in the world group couldn’t have been any better. I have no regrets.” PICS: Tim Henman's career | PICS: Greatest ever men | WATCH: No regrets for Tim