Ivanisevic promises final display of fireworks
不錯的報導文章
Ivanisevic promises final display of fireworks
Former Wimbledon champion is battling to regain fitness but insists
he still has a few surprises up his sleeve
By David Law in Zagreb
01 January 2003
Goran Ivanisevic has never done predictable, and he is not about to
start now.
This is, after all, the man with the unreturnable serve, who
reached three Wimbledon finals in the 1990s, and lost the lot. This
is the man who was forced to retire from a match in Brighton two
years ago because he "lacked the appropriate equipment"; he had
broken all of his rackets, in anger, during the match. This is the
man who explained that his behaviour was largely dictated by Good,
Bad, and Emergency 911 versions of himself.
This is the man who started 2001 renting practice-session tennis
balls at German tournaments on the challenger circuit, the tennis
version of the Nationwide League, and ended it as Wimbledon
champion. But after he suffered a shoulder injury so serious it
prevented him defending his title, most people thought he would
quit while he was so far ahead, retire to a little Croatian island,
and live happily ever after.
Not Ivanesevic. He underwent surgery in May, began a punishing
rehabilitation schedule that is still ongoing, and promises to
return to Wimbledon this summer.
"I'll be happy to play doubles in February in the Davis Cup tie
against America," he says. "If that's possible, I can then play
some tournaments in the States and, hopefully, be ready for
Wimbledon."
On the day of our meeting, I find him cracking forehands on an
indoor clay court encased in a gigantic, plastic bubble at the
private tennis club owned by the former Milan footballer Zvonimir
Boban, in Zagreb, Croatia.
Three weeks earlier, I had witnessed him jumping hurdles and
running 200 metre sprints in early-winter weather just up the road
at the Mladost athletics track. We were meant to meet there for our
interview the following day. In typical Goran style, he did not
show.
"Hey man, sorry about last time," he says in his deepest baritone,
offering a bear paw of a hand for me to shake. "I had to go
somewhere urgently and couldn't reach you."
It does not matter. Ivanisevic is impossible to stay angry with.
Among tennis players, he is one of the most genuine; it is just
that he simply does not know what he is going to do from one moment
to the next, let alone days later.
As we settle down to talk in Boban's stylish sports cafe adjacent
to the court, everyone is aware of his presence. Here in Croatia
Ivanisevic is loved as much, if not more, than any other star,
sporting or otherwise. Most nod their head and smile their
greetings, before returning to their coffees and conversations,
leaving Ivanisevic to his. He might be a national hero but, apart
from the money and fame, he is basically a down-to-earth guy from
Split, on the Dalmatian coast. People here treat him as such and he
appreciates the normality.
So, what on earth is he still doing wielding a racket with that
dodgy shoulder?
He smiles. "I ask myself sometimes what I'm still doing on the
tennis court, but..." He pauses to think for a few seconds,
probably waiting for the three Gorans to sort out the answer. "I
owe it to myself and my fans," he explains. "I can't finish my care
er like this. I have to come to Wimbledon."
Ivanisevic had waited a lifetime to open the Centre Court
proceedings this year in traditional, champion-style in the 1pm
match on the first Monday of Wimbledon, but, as his opportunity
approached, his shoulder injury worsened. A month before Wimbledon,
he could barely lift his left arm without pain.
"It was impossible," he says. "At the Davis Cup [in April] I
managed to play doubles, but only with great pain. I rested for six
weeks and it got even worse. I didn't want to come to Wimbledon
and play only one set just because I was the defending champion. I
wanted to defend my title the best I could and I was not able to do
that. I couldn't serve, so I decided it was time for a surgery."
In the end, it was Andre Agassi, his first Wimbledon final
conqueror in 1992, who took his place on the opening day. "It was
not easy for me to see him do that, because I always dreamt of win
ning Wimbledon, coming next year and opening the tournament, but I
am always unpredictable; I won Wimbledon and didn't show up!"
His rehabilitation has been a long, grinding process. He says his
ground strokes are better than ever, but his serve, the lifeblood
of his whole game, is still only 30 per cent of what it needs to be
.
"The doctors keep changing their story," he explains. "First it
would take six months, then nine, now it's 10. I have to be patient
, it's the only way I can fight back."
He is probably not the best patient in the world, I ventured. The
observation seems to strike a nerve with Good Goran.
"No, I'm not a bad patient at all," he says. "People, they judge me
how I am on the court– a little bit crazy, a little bit different
, impatient -but I am different out of the court, I am more patient
."
It does not take long for Bad Goran to butt into the conversation.
"The doctor said: 'Be patient'," he growls. "I listened to what he
said and did everything by the rules. I'm going to be patient for
another three or four months, but after that I can't promise what
I'm going to do."
If he does get to play Wimbledon in 2003, though, surely that will
be that? He shakes his head.
"We will see. I have a vision maybe to play through to the Olympic
Games in Athens. It would be my fifth Olympics and I can maybe
carry the flag for Croatia," he suggests.
"That is my vision, but I can't plan for the future too much
because I don't know what's going to happen tomorrow. I'll take it
slowly. This year was a strange year, different for me. I had a lot
of free time to think."
He also had time to start a family -his partner, Tatiana, is due to
give birth to their first child this summer, just in time for
Wimbledon ?and took the chance to indulge one of his football
fantasies.
Ivanisevic had long spoken of his desire to play for his beloved ho
metown team, Hajduk Split. Thanks to Boban, he got the next best
thing.
A couple of months previously, Boban, a key part of Croatia's 1998
World Cup semi-final team, retired from football in a blaze of glor
y and nostalgia, just up the road at the Maksimir stadium, home of
his first team, Dinamo Zagreb.
In tribute, the 1998 World Cup side reassembled for the first time
since their heroics in France, to play a World XI consisting of pla
yers such as Rivaldo, Lothar Matth酳s, Jean-Pierre Papin, and the B
razilian goalkeeper, Taffarel.
Fifteen minutes from the end, the action stopped, fireworks explode
d in the sky, and 40,000 fans rose to acclaim Boban as he was subst
ituted. His surprise replacement trotted on to the field to an equa
lly rapturous reception. It was Ivanisevic.
With his first touch, he went round a defender, and clinically slid
the ball, left-footed of course, past the sprawling dive of Taffar
el. The crowd went wild and Ivanisevic ran around the pitch swirlin
g his shirt around his head.
Wouldn't he like to retire in a similar style to Boban?
"I have in my head how I want to stop tennis and it's going to be
unique," he says. "Nobody's going to stop tennis like I'm going to
stop."
Meaning what?
"No, no, because then it's not going to be a surprise," he insists.
"But it's going to be unique. All my life I have done strange and
crazy things, and I think I have a right to stop my career like
that."
No one would have it any other way.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.csie.ntu.edu.tw)
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