Agassi第四輪賽後訪問

看板Agassi作者 (youtwo)時間22年前 (2003/09/04 05:38), 編輯推噓0(000)
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THE MODERATOR: First question. Q. Do you think you were able to settle into a rhythm? ANDRE AGASSI: Well, not as much as I certainly would have liked for a couple reasons. Obviously, the conditions play a major factor in a match, sort of establishing itself. Also the way Taylor was playing. He's a guy that can really take you out of your rhythm. He's a difficult guy to play against. Q. At 4-3, I think it was, in the third, his coach said on TV he thought Taylor should just come off the court. Did you have a sense the injury was as great as it apparently is? ANDRE AGASSI: No, I didn't. Well, I know that he was getting some treatment, you know, you never know what a guy is getting treatment for. Sometimes you're sitting around, your legs get a little stiff. You're trying to warm up, trying to get them to relax a little bit. You know, I've seen a lot of guys get rubbed out there and continue at a high standard. So for it to sort of abruptly come to an end was definitely a surprise to me. Q. Did you see, though, his serve - which obviously the first set, he served great. He served well in the second set. Third, his speed seemed to go down a little bit? ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, yeah, it did. No question about it. Again, you're never quite sure what the reason is for anything, as far as you're not inside a guy's head. I was returning his second pretty well at that stage. I didn't know if he was trying to take a little bit off of it or what have you. It started to become apparent he was struggling with his leg. I was just surprised that he was unable to continue. Q. What makes him so difficult to play against? ANDRE AGASSI: Well, the whole match, really. First of all, the serve speaks for itself, it's a big serve. He has real good hands up at net, covers the net really well. But he was getting, you know, great length on his returns today. If I missed a first serve, he was sort of charging forward. Not just coming forward on a bluff, he was coming forward on a real quality shot that, you know, he didn't have to move a step to cover the passing shot, because I was in such trouble off his approach shot. You know, it was just he was playing close to the lines. He was playing really well. It was just hard to deal with. Q. Is he playing any better than when you played him before? ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, no question about it. Q. What kind of things did you do to stay loose during the long rain delays or short rain delays, too? ANDRE AGASSI: I mean, you just sit around and tell stories and, you know... Q. You don't stretch or...? ANDRE AGASSI: Well, you know, you warm up when you sort of get the idea that you're within 30 minutes of going out there. But the rest of the time you try not to -- you try not to fatigue yourself, you know, thinking about the match too much because there's nothing you can do about it and you got a long day. You're gonna have to concentrate long enough when you're out there. Q. You've been talking about this for years, but you hit a couple critical volleys out there tonight. Are you doing that more with Darren now, or are you comfortable, is it just a change in tactic for you? ANDRE AGASSI: As of right now, I only really want to be coming to net on my terms, which means if I'm just coming in to really finish something off. You know, I think there will come a stage of my career where sort of it's harder for me to get things done from the back of the court and I need to start implementing that more just because it becomes about winning points as opposed to breaking guys down. But, you know, as of right now, I stick to my guns, I stick to my strengths. Certainly try to be confident when I come in. But if I'm coming in, having to play two volleys, I'm doing something pretty drastically wrong. Q. You seem to deal with these conditions well, your stamina, strength. Rain delays don't seem to faze you. Can you talk about that? ANDRE AGASSI: I'd be a good poker player then 'cause, you know, these conditions affect everybody. It's just a question of trying to get the most out of yourself. A lot of years of experience, but it's still difficult to do. Q. French Open, after you lost to Coria, you expressed the desire to play him on a hard court. Are you hoping he beats Bjorkman so you get that opportunity? ANDRE AGASSI: Actually, my quote was to play him at Wimbledon. Q. He's up a set and a break. Just talk about playing him on a hard court, because it's obviously not grass but it's definitely different than clay. ANDRE AGASSI: Yeah, well, yeah. I'd rather play him here than in Paris, that's for sure. He played a great match that day against me in Paris. You know, not to say that he's not effective on the hard courts. He's been doing a lot better on the other surfaces now, too. He's a great mover, a great ball striker. I'll have to have a lot of conviction in my game. You know, should be a good match. Q. The first rain delay in particular, did that unnerve you more? You were coming off a break, seemed to find momentum after the first one? ANDRE AGASSI: Well, it's always hard to sort of get the engines going again. When there's sort of so much riding on that first opening game, sometimes you think more about closing out the set than you do about playing quality tennis. You know, when you start a match, you just let your game happen, you know. When you go out there and it's 5-4 and you know if you can get up a set lead, four points -- you know, I just played a bit of a tentative game, but he came up with a few real good shots. So it was a bit of both. You know, but he earned that first set. There was a lot of tennis left, but I think the second rain delay was more frustrating being down 7-6. Q. What are your thoughts on the compressed schedule the next few days, given the rain-outs? ANDRE AGASSI: Well, they have the option of going Thursday, Saturday, Sunday, so I don't know what the conclusion's gonna be on the scheduling. But, you know, it's a tough situation for everybody. It's tough for the players, tough for the fans, tough for the tournament to sort of make all the calls and sort of the, you know, audibles at the line. It's hard to make those calls. They have a lot of experience doing it. So there's a lot of variables to consider. I wish it was only my match they were worried about, but it's unfortunately the rest of the tournament. Q. How would you like to see it handled based on what you've experienced in the last couple days? ANDRE AGASSI: (Smiling). Well, listen, I have full confidence in Jim Curley and Brian Earley and all the folks that are responsible for trying to handle a difficult situation. So you wouldn't want me making those decisions. Q. How tough would it be for you to play if you had to play three matches in three days, best-of-five? ANDRE AGASSI: It would be really tough. Be tough on everybody. But that's sort of what makes tennis so special, is regardless of what the circumstances are, two guys usually have to deal with it, have to find a way. (This is a partial transcript) FastScripts by ASAP Sports... -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.csie.ntu.edu.tw) ◆ From: 140.112.216.120
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文章代碼(AID): #_LbzI_X (Agassi)