[穆瑞] 2007澳網第二輪訪問
Andy Murray
Thursday, 18 January, 2007
http://tinyurl.com/3bvm4h
Start of Transcribed Interview
A. MURRAY/F. Verdasco
7-6, 7-5, 6-4
An interview with:
ANDY MURRAY
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. You must be pleased, but also relieved you were able to win that in
straight sets. It was quite a tough match, wasn't it?
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, I mean, he's a really, really tricky guy to play against.
You know, he's beaten a lot of top players, and you can see why. He's got a
really good first serve, obviously lefty makes it tougher. He's got really
sort of an unpredictable forehand. His backhand is really solid. He moves
well and competes hard. It was really difficult, and I was expecting it.
So, yeah, I was happy to have won in three sets. If it had to go longer then
I was willing to stay out there. But it was tough conditions today, because
after the first set the court started to warm up and it kind of burned your
feet and your legs start to get a little more tired. It was difficult.
Q. Do you think a year ago there may have been a different outcome?
ANDY MURRAY: Well, yeah. I wasn't very good a year ago. You know, I was
ranked 65. Didn't have a lot of experience. You know, this year, maybe I
wouldn't have broken him when he served for the set, the first set. When I
went 15-40 down at 6-5, when I was serving for it, you know, I might not have
come back from those situations. I might have let it slip. And this year I
think my experience, you know, is obviously much, much greater. So that
helped. Obviously since last year I've improved a lot. He probably would have
beaten me a year ago.
Q. How do you benefit from a match like that? What do you take out of it now?
ANDY MURRAY: Well, just knowing that you can beat a very tough opponent in
straight sets, in conditions that, you know, are difficult. I played a lot of
matches, you know, in Grand Slams where I'd be the one calling the trainer out,
you know, having to ?? you know, having to get the medical timeouts. He was
obviously the one that was feeling it a bit more than me out there. I take a
lot of confidence from it because, as I said, he's a very, very good player.
I think he's ranked 34, 35. Just missed out on getting seeded. To win against
guys like that in Grand Slams is a very good win for me.
Q. You asked for an ice towel. Did you consider an ice vest?
ANDY MURRAY: No, I didn't want to use one of them. I like having it on the
back of your neck, kind of on your forehead to sort of cool your head down a
little bit. I just feel with an ice vest, if you're constantly changing the
heat on your shoulder and stuff, it's not very good for your serve. You might
get a little bit stiffer. But on your neck it was fine. It kind of helps you
concentrate a bit better when you use them, whereas if not you kind of take a
bit longer to catch your breath. It just feels so hot out there.
Q. When was the last time you played in conditions that hot? We were boiling
where we were. You must have been feeling it big time down there.
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, it's definitely tougher on court for me (smiling). I mean,
it is really hot on the court. Washington last year was much hotter than that
and more humid, but it's just the courts here, they get so warm.Like in
Washington and stuff you get a bit out of breath. It's kind of tough to
breathe. Your muscles, your legs don't get as tired. Here, the court is so
hot that you feel your feet burning. They're sore when you come off the court.
Your legs, a lot more lactic acid buildup in your legs. They feel a little
bit more worn out.I've played in hotter conditions. It's just the court here.
It just makes it so much tougher.
Q. You've now played three matches here, all on the same Vodafone. Would you
rather play somewhere else? Are you getting used it and it might be an
advantage?
ANDY MURRAY: Well, I'd love to play on Rod Laver. It's something -- I want to
play on all the big courts at the Grand Slams. I played Centre Court at
Wimbledon, Center Court at French Open. I've now played on the second biggest
court here. Obviously at US Open.If I get a chance to play on Rod Laver, that
would be great. Probably won't get the chance to do that in my next round.
The further you go in the tournament, the more chance there is of you playing
on it. Regardless of what court it is, you just have to adapt. The Vodafone
court is a nice one to play on. It's a really good atmosphere. It's a big
stadium. I enjoy it.
Q. Is your serve -- do you think that's the area that -- to get you up to the
real elite of the ATP, that's the area that c--
ANDY MURRAY: So I'm not in the elite yet?
Q. Well, Slam winning let's put it.
ANDY MURRAY: Okay. Well, in the first set, I didn't serve that well. I served
well in some big points, you know, at 6-5 in the second set, and deuce I aced
him on the set point. I think 215 kilometer serve down the T on the deuce
point.So the consistency in Doha was there. I was serving up at 69, 68% in a
couple of my matches, whereas last year I was probably serving at 50%. I feel
now this year when my first serve does go in it's much more effective than it
was last year. I feel like I can improve all parts of my game, but when my
serve's on I think it's a pretty dangerous shot. I think it's more a strength
thing, not a technique thing. The stronger I get, the better my serve will
get.
Q. You beat Chela the end of last year. How much will you relish the
opportunity to play him here again, get a bit of revenge against him?
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, I'm looking forward to it. It's going to be a tough match.
He plays really well on these courts. He's obviously used to the heat. Had a
good win today. He beat Hewitt here last year. It's going to be really
difficult, but I feel like I'm much better than I was last year. I'm in
better shape than I was. As I said, I got more experience. It's probably
going to be a completely different match, but one that's definitely going to
be very close. Not an easy one for me if I want to win.
Q. What does it mean to you personally and professionally to have your
brother on tour with you?
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, it's great. All of the other sort of brothers, sisters on
tour I'm sure will say the same thing. It's great to have someone in your
family that's going to be around at all of the big tournaments, someone that
you can hang out with, have fun with, get the chance to play with him.I would
love at one stage to play doubles with my brother at Wimbledon. That would be
great. Not too many brothers or whatever can say they played in one of the
biggest sporting competitions in the world with someone in their family. I
would love to do that.Just having him around is great. I enjoy it a lot. It
makes things much easier, and it takes a bit of strain off the relationship
with the coach. You can go out for dinner with your brother and your coach.
It's not just one-on-one all the time. That makes it much easier.
Q. What sort of doubles team would you make? Are you on the same wavelength?
Do you complement each other?
ANDY MURRAY: We've played a few times together on tour. I think we played
three times together. We made final in Bangkok. No, four times. Final in
Bangkok, quarters in Tokyo, semis in Doha, and we lost in the first round in
Newport. We play pretty well together. Return is the best part of my game.
The volleys are the best part of his game. We did play pretty well together,
and I think the more we do play the better we'll get.
Q. Does it feel a bit strange being on the other side of the world, getting
such strong support from thousands of people?
ANDY MURRAY: I was just saying in the on?court interview I did afterwards
that's it's amazing to kind of come to a tournament that's not at home and
you feel like the crowd's for you almost. Obviously I'm not going to get that
sort of support everywhere, but I think the support I get here is
unbelievable and I'm very grateful for everyone that comes to support. It
makes it much easier for you. It is difficult, especially in this heat, if
you -- I'm sure the people that play against Hewitt will tell you, it is
really difficult when you've got that many people kind of screaming against
you. So it does make it much easier. I can't believe so many people enjoy
watching me play 'cause it's definitely not very interesting (smiling).
Q. Did you hear the chorus of, "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life"?
ANDY MURRAY: I did, yeah.
Q. Are you doing that more now perhaps?
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, I definitely look on the bright side of life much more. I
read some of your articles. You tend to be a bit the other way (smiling).
Yeah, I mean, compared with last year, as I said, I'm much happier and
definitely having more fun on the court. I did question a few line calls
today. There was quite a lot of close ones that I felt maybe went against me,
whereas I didn't let it affect my game. I just felt like there were a lot of
calls really close, and none of them really went for me. I dealt with it
pretty well. It was all good out there.
Q. Some of the people have been saying maybe Hawk?Eye is not such a good
thing now. Federer was saying he didn't like it yesterday. Bjorkman was
saying the umpires kind of hide behind it. I guess you would have liked
Hawk-Eye out there today, wouldn't you?
ANDY MURRAY: Yeah, I mean, I saw the thing that happened with Mauresmo
yesterday when the Hawk-Eye called the ball in when the mark showed that it
was pretty clearly out. I mean, that does put a bit of doubt in your mind.
The most important thing is that the fans enjoy it. At the end of the day, if
it's going to make more fans come, then that's obviously better for us. Some
people like it. Some people don't. I do think that the umpires, you know, you
don't see them overruling anywhere near as much because of the Hawk-Eye. You
know, it's something that the fans definitely enjoy, and that's why we should
keep going with it.
Q. You hadn't played Verdasco, but obviously had seen him play.
ANDY MURRAY: Sorry, I had played him before.
Q. What was the tactical plan?
ANDY MURRAY: I played him when I was 16 in a challenger in Segovia. I twisted
my ankle against him, lost 3-1. I remember coming off the court, just
realizing how much spin the top players put on the ball. It was at altitude.
I felt like I was hitting every ball above my ahead. I felt like today, you
know, I knew he served well and had a big forehand. I wanted to, when I did
go into his forehand, hit it a little bit bigger and flatter, not give him
the chance to use his spin as much. Also when I came into the net, I wanted
not to come into his forehand because it's much nor spinny, and therefore he
can create much more angles. I thought I did a pretty good job of
serve-volleying today, which I think changed the match a little bit when I
was 4-1 down in the second set. It was something definitely I had spoken
about with Brad. It wasn't one thing in particular, but I wanted to focus on
serving well on the big points, playing aggressive when I did go into his
forehand and approaching into his backhand. I think they all worked pretty
well.
Q. 12 months on, where do you think you made the biggest improvement? Is it
mentally or physically going into the Chela game?
ANDY MURRAY: I don't know if it's one for sure. I think kind of everything.
My game has obviously got better. Physically I'm definitely stronger.
Mentally I feel like I'm keeping it together much more on the court than I
did maybe last year. I don't know if there's one thing in particular, but I
definitely felt much sort of stronger out there on the court than I did last
year because it was obviously tough conditions today and I came through it
pretty well.
--
╔════════╦════════╦════════╦════════╗
║Name:Sugiuchi 47║Name:Saitoh 66║Name:Arakaki 18║Name:Wada 21║
║Heights:175cm ║Heights:192cm ║Heights:189cm ║Heights:179cm ║
║Weights:81kg ║Weights:96kg ║Weights:82kg ║Weights:77kg ║
║Glove:Rawlings ║Glove:Adidas ║Glove:Mizuno ║Glove:Nike ║
╚════════╩════════╩════════╩════════╝
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 218.167.181.199
※ 編輯: yevvi 來自: 218.167.181.199 (03/10 20:20)
GBR_Tennis 近期熱門文章
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章