[澳網] 2nd Round Andy vs Kunitsyn 數據 & 訪問
╭───────┬────┬──────╮
│Andy Roddick │ USA (8)│7(9) 6 6 │
Men's Singles - 2nd Rnd.├───────┼────┼──────┤
│Igor Kunitsyn │ RUS │6(7) 2 3 │
╰───────┴────┴──────╯
╭───────────┬─────────┬─────────╮
│ Match Summary │ Roddick (USA) │ Kunitsyn(RUS) │
├───────────┼─────────┼─────────┤
│ 1st Serve % │ 55 of 82 = 67 % │ 60 of 91 = 66 % │
│ Aces │ 17 │ 4 │
│ Double Faults │ 5 │ 0 │
│ Unforced Errors │ 16 │ 33 │
│ Win. % on 1st S. │ 47 of 55 = 85 % │ 40 of 60 = 67 % │
│ Win. % on 2nd S. │ 20 of 27 = 74 % │ 19 of 31 = 61 % │
│ Winners │ 31 │ 31 │
│ Rec. Points Won │ 32 of 91 = 35 % │ 15 of 87 = 17 % │
│ BP Conversions │ 3 of 7 = 43 % │ 0 of 3 = 0 % │
│ Net Approaches │ 8 of 15 = 53 % │ 26 of 39 = 67 % │
│ Total Points Won │ 99 │ 74 │
│ Fastest Serve │ 221 KMH │ 195 KMH │
│ Av. 1st Serve Speed │ 195 KMH │ 181 KMH │
│ Av. 2nd Serve Speed │ 181 KMH │ 134 KMH │
╰───────────┴─────────┴─────────╯
------------
賽後官方訪問 http://ppt.cc/Rs5l
Q. How well had he played up until the tiebreak, the set points?
ANDY RODDICK: I thought he played well. He was very convinced of his game
plan and executed it well. I don't think he wanted to settle into long
points. He was taking the first ball, going up the line with it. You know, it
was very high risk, but he was converting for, you know, pretty much all the
first set.
So I definitely wasn't comfortable early on in that one.
Q. What changed?
ANDY RODDICK: Well, I kind of I guess got on to his pattern a little bit. I
played him a couple times before and, uhm, he wasn't as quick to pull the
trigger on his forehand. His backhand, he likes going up the line. But the
pattern started playing itself out, so I was able to kind of adjust and get
the ball to where I wanted to, where I was pushing to his forehand side.
Once I was able to establish that neutral ball there, uhm, I felt like the
dynamic of the point started shifting to my direction.
Q. As far as the first two rounds of a slam, how contented are you with how
things have gone so far?
ANDY RODDICK: Well, I get to play again so... That's all you want. You know,
it could have gotten uncomfortable today if that first set would have gotten
away.
In retrospect, you always try to convince yourself that's a good thing to get
through a tough set like that. Going into the match, if you're given an
option, you want it to be as easy as possible every time.
Yeah, but, I mean, I feel like I'm hitting the ball fine. I'm serving very
well. You know, kind of controlling the match with that right now. That's
always a good thing for me.
Q. Can you talk a little bit about confidence, how it is different when you
step on the court and you are full of confidence? Which shot does it affect
most, strengths, weaknesses?
ANDY RODDICK: Well, for me it's not really about one shot, I don't think. I
think when you're confident, the court just makes sense; decisions come
easier to you. A lot of it comes naturally. There's not a whole lot of
thought process. You're not forcing a lot. The ball kind of, I guess, reacts
the way you want it to.
You know, I think at least for me that just comes with playing matches. I've
certainly been out on the court enough the early part of the season here with
Brisbane and now here. So I feel comfortable out there right now.
Q. Do you have a specific routine on a Grand Slam, knowing it can last two
weeks, in order to stay fresh?
ANDY RODDICK: Yeah, I mean, I think you learn as you go. I think you learn
what an important part nutrition plays, sleep plays, hydration plays. As much
as hitting balls on off days, I think it's more about making sure your body's
right.
Not every match is going to go five hours. Every match has potential to go
five hours. So I think you need to prepare accordingly. Then if you have
energy left in the tank, that's a good thing.
But, yeah, I mean, I definitely think, you know, I've learned it's as much
about, uhm, you know, getting your body back to neutral not just in slams but
in every tournament but probably more so in slams because kind of the extreme
nature of how long you might be out there.
Q. You've got a lot of nervous energy. Hard for you to mellow that?
ANDY RODDICK: No. No. I mean, I think it's easier now (laughter). But, no, I
mean, I certainly stay, you know, pretty active on off days. I don't like
waiting around to practice until 5:00 in the afternoon. I think it's better
if I kind of burn a little bit of energy early on in the day.
But 10 years later, I'm able to choose how to occupy my time, I guess.
Q. Speaking of five hour matches, did you catch any of Lleyton and Nalbandian
last night?
ANDY RODDICK: I was asleep towards the front end of the third set.
Q. Your thoughts. An amazing first round.
ANDY RODDICK: I watched a little bit of a rerun this morning before the
tennis went live. It's what you expect of those guys. They're both kind of
well versed in how to proceed in a Grand Slam match, and it showed. I thought
it was pretty good quality. Certainly physical.
I mean, that was the match that everyone pointed to in the first round. You
often have matches like that, but they rarely live up to the full extent of
the hype. That one certainly lived up to it, I think.
Q. Is your excitement level at the start of another new year as high as it's
ever been?
ANDY RODDICK: I don't know. I have a tough time remembering what my
excitement level was in 2002. No, I'm certainly still motivated. I love what
I do. I don't know that I take it for granted, you know. I certainly realize
that I'm one of the lucky ones that gets to do this.
So, uhm, from that aspect I think it's more about treating it with respect,
being prepared, and not short changing yourself. I feel like I do that.
Q. You still have areas you want to improve in the game. Are you surprised at
all that Roger is 29, has won everything, and still seems pretty pumped up?
ANDY RODDICK: I think he enjoys himself. You know, like some champions in the
past, I don't think it's a tortured existence to be good at this game for
him. I think he honestly enjoys it.
You know, so I don't know if I get that surprised by it. I certainly get up
and am motivated, too. I haven't won nearly as much as Roger, but the time
has been about the same.
Q. Of your career, the number of European players on the tour has obviously
risen quite dramatically. I think 95 of the guys in the draw here are
European. From a player's perspective, does that change the nature of the
tour or the game at all?
ANDY RODDICK: Are you talking about since I started?
Q. Yes, generally.
ANDY RODDICK: I can't talk about anything from before I started.
In what way? Like languages in the locker room?
Q. Socially, I guess.
ANDY RODDICK: I guess it would make sense if there are more Italians and
French people, people would be speaking more Italian and French.
I would certainly like to see more Americans in the top hundred. I'm not sure
how many are there now, but I know it's not what it was when I started.
You know, I always hear about the days when they were 40, 50 some odd
Americans, Australians. But, again, that's never been the norm since I've
been out here.
Q. Does it have a different sort of feel than when you started because of
that change at all?
ANDY RODDICK: I don't really remember and/or have consciously thought about
it too much. The tour's always just been what it's been. I mean, my friends
have been the same since I started. So, you know, it's kind of like high
school: you got all your little cliques. As long as your clique is intact,
you don't pay attention to anything else.
Q. Do you think that's had an impact in America?
ANDY RODDICK: Oh, anywhere. Yeah, I mean, I think any country where success
is prominent, especially in America where they've been spoiled in the best
possible way, any country would Neil be sitting here if the top British guy
would be 90 in the world? You don't know. That's just the reality of the
situation.
But he's kind of walked into a couple guys who have been top five, therefore
it generates a lot of interest in that part of the world.
I don't think that's specific to any region in particular. I think that's
pretty common.
Q. We're pretty excited about Bernard Tomic in Australia. Can you give us
your assessment of his talent at the moment?
ANDY RODDICK: I'd be bordering on ignorance. I think we practiced one time
for a half hour.
I mean, obviously he has a great feel for the ball. You know, now it's just a
matter of getting I haven't seen much of him for the last year. I don't think
I have the best maybe my opinion wouldn't be very good there.
-----------
官網照片 http://ppt.cc/eBrx
GettyImage照片 http://ppt.cc/f2YM
--
☆╭※╮☆ ╭═╯ ☆╭※╮☆
╭╯│╰╮ ║ ╮ ╭ ╭═╮ ╭═╮ ╮ ╭ ╭╯│╰╮
※─★─※ ╰═╮║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ※─★─※
╰╮│╭╯ ╮ ║║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ║ ╰═╯ ╰╮│╭╯
☆╰※╯☆ ╰═╯╰═╯ ╯ ╰ ╯ ╰ ╯ ☆╰※╯☆
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 114.24.57.207
※ 編輯: sunny613 來自: 114.24.57.207 (01/19 20:18)
推
01/19 22:06, , 1F
01/19 22:06, 1F
推
01/19 22:53, , 2F
01/19 22:53, 2F
推
01/19 23:02, , 3F
01/19 23:02, 3F
推
01/19 23:49, , 4F
01/19 23:49, 4F
推
01/20 01:22, , 5F
01/20 01:22, 5F
→
01/20 01:23, , 6F
01/20 01:23, 6F
推
01/20 10:57, , 7F
01/20 10:57, 7F
推
01/20 13:43, , 8F
01/20 13:43, 8F
Roddick 近期熱門文章
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章