May 9 - New Zealand sailboarder Barbara Kendall, winner of three Olympic medals, has abandoned plans to carry on competing until London 2012 and has announced her retirement at the age of 42.



Kendall had competed in five consecutive Olympics since making her debut at Barcelona in 1992, where she won the gold medal, and subsequently claimed the silver at Atlanta in 1996 and bronze in Sydney in 2000.

"After 24 years I'd lost the passion for competing," she said.

"I used to be consumed by it, and when I got back out there I was waiting for that feeling to come back, and it just didn't. I felt tired, and had nothing left."

Kendall competed at her fifth Olympics in Beijing in 2008, finishing sixth, the same year she claimed silver at the World Championships which showed she could still be competitive at the highest level.

Kendall, whose brother Bruce also won Olympic gold in sailboard at Seoul in 1988, also won World Championships in 1998, 1999 and 2002, along with four consecutive silver medals between 2003-2008.

Kendall was also a four-time New Zealand Sports Woman of the Year.

"There have been so many highlights, that's why I did it for so long," she said.

"Winning Olympic gold was a big highlight, but then that seemed to pale when I went and won the World Championships after just having a baby.

"Those high points just kept coming.

"I miss it, I miss parts of that lifestyle.

"But sometimes you have to close one door before you know what comes next for you.

"I feel lucky that I could come to the decision for myself, I wasn't forced into retirement by injury or pushed out by the younger girls or overtaken."

Kendall, a mother of two daughters Samantha and Aimee, said she would now put more time into her roles in sports administration, including with the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

She sits on the IOC's Athletes Commission, and is also on the IOC's Women and Sport Commission.

Kendall also holds two positions with the Oceania Olympic Committee as an Executive Board member, and the President of their Athletes' Commission.