MARY PIERCE第二輪訪問
Mary Pierce
Thursday, August 28, 2003
THE MODERATOR: Questions for Mary, please.
Q. Nice going. Were you trying to build up the suspense or what?
MARY PIERCE: No, I didn't need any more than was already going on. So just
happened that way, I guess. Made the victory sweeter.
Q. But at 5-1, are you thinking about a warm shower or...?
MARY PIERCE: No, cold shower, actually.
But 5-1, yeah, see, I didn't realize it was 5-1. I knew it was 5-2.
You know, I just tried to just stay calm and just told myself to just fight,
you know. Just kept repeating that one word to myself. You know, you never
know what can happen in tennis, so...
Q. English or French?
MARY PIERCE: English.
Q. This hasn't been a great year for Dokic. She's one of the few seeded
players that has a sub-500 record coming in. Are you at all thinking as you
begin to rally in the third set that maybe her confidence is not that high in
general, if you can get something going, maybe she'll go to pieces?
MARY PIERCE: I was thinking that more in the beginning when I first came out.
Jelena hasn't been playing as well as she had in the past.
But needless to say, she has been starting to play better again. I'm
starting to play better. So, you know, I just thought it was real important
in the beginning to just start off really well and, you know, maybe that
issue of her confidence level would come up and that would be a good thing
for me, so positive for my side.
But, you know, definitely in the third set I thought that she looked pretty
confident. I think that she thought she pretty much had the match.
Q. She won only four points of the next 24.
MARY PIERCE: Okay. I didn't know that (smiling).
Q. Was that you or was that her, that statistic? Was that you all of a
sudden raising your game, or did she go off into another planet there?
MARY PIERCE: I went to another planet. No.
You know, like I said, I just tried to stay calm. I really just went for my
shots. I think in the big moments of the match, you know, it seemed to me
that Jelena really stepped it up and played some good tennis. She hit some
shots, you know, there was nothing I could do.
I was being a little bit tentative when I had my chances, maybe vary. Started
to miss a few shots that I wasn't missing in the beginning, like in the first
set. You know, I'm still not back to the level where I want to be; it's still
a process for me. So, you know, the fitness and my physical level is getting
better, but it's not there yet. So that was also an issue for me.
My legs kind of weren't there in the third set, so I just said, you know,
"Just start going for your shots," you know.
Q. You worked so hard to get back from the injuries, get your fitness back.
You've won a Grand Slam, you've done a lot. What is your motivation? Why do
you want to keep doing this instead of going on to something else?
MARY PIERCE: Because when I won the French Open, I just felt like I was
starting to scratch the surface of coming into myself and my potential and
being the best that I can be. Then, you know, since then I, you know, had
some injuries, I've been out for a while. So I just feel like I haven't
really done everything that's in me to accomplish in tennis. What that is,
I don't know. But I just feel like I have more in me.
I just want to continue and try to get back and just be the best that I can
and just see where that takes me, you know. Whenever it's time to move on
and stop or do something else, I'll feel it and I'll know.
Q. You've had so many ups and downs, highs and lows from when you started.
How has your relationship with the game changed as you've matured and
grown up?
MARY PIERCE: I really appreciate what I do a lot more. I love it. Where at
times, it's really difficult, you know, always traveling, being away from
home. There are times when you just want to be home, you know.
And so when I had the injuries and I was out, I really wanted to play because
I was really starting to play well and just do well and have fun. It was a
really difficult thing for me. Sometimes you don't want to play but you're
doing fine and you're healthy, so you've got really no reason to stop.
So it really, you know, made me think a lot and just really miss it and
realize what a great life I have. I don't really think I have a job, you
know. It's just something that I do that is just great. I appreciate every
day more than I used to.
Q. Can you remember the last time you came back in a match like this, third
set from that sort of deficit, especially in a Grand Slam?
MARY PIERCE: Two matches come to mind that I played. I played Lori McNeil
here at this tournament, down 6-3 in the tiebreak. I don't know if I was down
a set and 6-3 in the second-set tiebreak or if it was just the third set.
I don't remember.
Then I played, I want to say...I don't have a good memory with my matches,
actually. I think Hingis in San Diego. I was down in the third. I came back,
I think, and won. I'm not sure.
Q. Looking at saying you're in this process of coming back, you've felt your
legs, for instance, in the third set today, realistically speaking, what are
your expectations in this tournament?
MARY PIERCE: In this tournament? I don't have any at all. I just take it
day by day and match by match. I already did better than last year, you know.
Last year I lost in the first round. It's not like, "Okay, I'm satisfied,
if I lose I'm happy." That's not how I feel. I just know that I'm in the
process of working back to getting to the level that I want to be and need
to be to compete in the top.
So I'm just going out and trying to improve every day and every match. When
I step on the court, just to enjoy it and give 100 percent. You know,
whatever happens, happens.
Like all the girls out here, we all want to win. We're competitive. No one
likes to lose.
--
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