AA賽後訪問
很長的訪問 :p
A. AGASSI/N. Escude
6-2, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4
THE MODERATOR: First question for Andre, please.
Q. Are you concerned about peaking too early?
ANDRE AGASSI: My experience has always taught me
in these Grand Slam tournaments that you need to
play well at the right time. While maybe my second-
round match was playing better than I needed to
that given day, today was a day that was a pretty
dangerous one for me. I needed to play well.
I thought Nicolas was hitting the ball really well,
timing it superbly on the returns, putting me under
a lot of pressure. I needed to play well. So it's
a good one to get through.
Q. Is the need always answered?
ANDRE AGASSI: Sorry, I don't understand.
Q. Well, you needed to play well. You need to play
well on a lot of occasions. Sometimes you don't.
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, that's right. I think that's
what makes a difference in these tournaments, is
having that good day when you need it and getting
through that tough day when things might not feel
well. That's what decides it. Today was one of those
days I needed to, I needed to step up and play at his
level - or better.
Q. And didn't feel particularly well?
ANDRE AGASSI: No, I did. Felt real good.
Q. The seventh game of the third set was a turning
point in the match. You served an incredible game.
He had a lot of breakpoints.
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, the third set was pretty fortunate
for me all the way around, to be quite honest. I was
down many breakpoints throughout the whole set. I felt
like it was love-30 or 15-40 every time I went to the
baseline to serve. I hit a few good shots down breakpoint,
hustled, he made a few errors.
It's one of those where you live by the sword and you
die by the sword. He plays dangerously, risky. He's going
to hit his shots and he's going to miss them. You just
hope that he doesn't make them at the most important times
and you hope that you can step up and take control when
you have to. I played the big points as well as I could
have hoped today.
Q. At this stage in your career do you look forward to
playing a talented baseliner or somebody who's talented
technically?
ANDRE AGASSI: Well, I think it's always a great -- it's
always a great matchup when you play somebody that sort
of plays different than you. It brings alive many aspects
of the game. It's one of the great joys playing Pete, or
playing Rafter, was you're going to see how the game can
be played in many different ways. That's always a lot of
fun.
Q. Are you as obviously elated as you seem by this match?
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah. I feel great. I mean, that's a great
one to get through. You never look ahead in the draw. But
he's not a guy that you ever want near you. He's dangerous.
He can put destiny in his own hands. You always got to
worry about guys that have that kind of talent.
^^ 不敢當啦:p
Q. After two three-setters, having a four-setter today,
preparation-wise, it wasn't bad timing for you?
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, happy to get through it more than
anything. Now in hindsight I can say, yeah, it was good to
be out there a little longer, test yourself, put yourself
in a lot of tough situations. And the fact that I'm still
alive means I can use this for some more progress.
Q. Had to go to a hat?
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, kept a hat on today. Was just... Don't
want to burn anymore.
Q. I know the feeling.
ANDRE AGASSI: (Smiling) I can't take it. Hurts.
在暗示想要打晚上的比賽:p
Q. What do you know about your next opposition, Coria?
ANDRE AGASSI: Well, we've played once.
Q. Cincinnati, was it?
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, that's right. A baseliner, good strokes
up both sides, is very quick. I'm going to need to step up
and play my game and stay in control of the match. A guy like
that, if you give him a chance to hit his shots, he's pretty
dangerous, so...
Q. Do you think Nicolas is going to eventually reach the
finals or win a Grand Slam tournament?
ANDRE AGASSI: Who's that? Escude?
這記者讚 哈哈
Q. Yes.
ANDRE AGASSI: Well, how can I speak to who can win or not win
when it's -- you know, you're talking about a guy that has
potential to play some incredible matches. You stick a competitor's
heart and mind in there and anything can happen.
Q. Did you ever look at the tape of the US Open final with Pete?
ANDRE AGASSI: No.
Q. There was one point I think in the fourth set, 2-1, you had a
phenomenal return, he hit that half-volley.
ANDRE AGASSI: Backhand behind him?
Q. Drop-volley winner. You ever think about - if that hadn't
happened?
ANDRE AGASSI: Well, I am at the moment, only 'cause you asked
(laughter). Actually doing pretty good forgetting about that.
Yeah, that was a key point in the match, to say the least. I
felt like I finally sort of got my teeth into the match. I was
getting some more chances. Two breakpoints that game. One he did
that, the other one I just dumped a backhand return, he had an
average kick, stayed back. I just missed the return.
You can replay points till you're blue in the face. You just do
your best to give yourself the opportunity and to hope things go
well when you get those opportunities.
Q. What's your reaction to Pete's decision to keep playing? Were
you surprised by it?
ANDRE AGASSI: No, I mean, I didn't have any expectation one way
or the other, to be honest. Like I've addressed before, when he
was going through his "slump," I spoke very clearly about the
fact that he's earned the right to play this game on his terms.
He's done enough to earn that respect. If he wants to be out there
struggling, if he wants to be out there losing matches, competing,
trying to get better whatever level he happens to be playing on,
that's up to him.
I say the same thing at this stage of his career, which is he's
earned the right to leave this game on his terms, whatever those
terms may be, he has to live with.
So whichever he decides, I know that he'll be clear-minded in it.
Q. You're happy he's still there, you can match up?
ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, you never really want to see a player like
that go away. You never want to see it. It's inevitable for all
of us, and you get the feeling like it's closer for some than
others. But anybody you've grown up with, competing with, I was
just talking about today in the locker room, you know, I've been
playing against Michael Chang for 23 years.
Q. When you broke on to the scene, you played against those
Juniors, Jim, Michael, Pete, who did you think would be your greatest
rival when you were starting off on the tour?
ANDRE AGASSI: It was hard to say because Michael was always younger
and playing up, and so was Pete. So they were always sort of smaller
and always playing better guys and losing, so you never really had a
feel for how good they were going to be. You always sort of were
pushing yourself to get better, looking at those, and they weren't
quite, in the early Juniors, on my level. I was a year older, and a
year makes a huge difference when you're 10 and 12 and 14 years old.
Jim was sort of the first one to -- that I felt his presence. The
first time Jim came out I said, "This guy has a big game." Michael
broke through, but I always thought Jim had a big game.
Q. When you started playing on the tour in the early days, who did
you think would be your greatest rival of those three?
ANDRE AGASSI: I'm glad nobody asked me then, because I would have
said it might be anybody, but not Pete (laughter). I played Pete in
Rome in 1989 and said, "The poor guy can't keep a ball in the court.
He never should have got rid of his two-handed backhand. I just don't
see a good future for him."
Q. Darren Cahill, 12 months on from his appointment, what has he
brought to your game?
ANDRE AGASSI: He's added a tremendous amount. If you really look
at it for what it was, last year I left here not only in jeopardy
of maybe never playing the game of tennis again, but I left here
losing the win here at the Australian Open. I had the win at Palm
Springs coming off, I had the win at Key Biscayne coming off. I was
a lot closer to 50 in the world than I was 5 in the world with the
future unsure.
For him to step in and say, "Let's put our head down and go to work,
I think there's things I can help you with," that doesn't just speak
to him as a coach, because that's a given, but it also speaks to him
as a man, somebody who's willing to step into that situation like that
with potentially only downside.
Unless I'm out here competing to win Slams, he's failed at his job.
It takes a strong person to step up and do that, and I appreciated
his commitment to me professionally and personally and still do. He's
brought a tremendous amount of inspiration to my game, focus, and he's
helped me get better.
Q. Wins like today, where it's very tight, the adrenaline is really
going, sweeter now for you than they were ten years ago?
ANDRE AGASSI: I think so. I think everything sort of gets exaggerated
as you get older. You realize there's less of everything out there
to experience. That includes the disappointments. Unfortunately, you
need a disappointment to appreciate how good it is to get through
difficult matches. I definitely enjoy it more now.
--
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