BEIJING 08

BEIJING 08
The ITF today announced the publication of its official Olympic Book 'Journey to Beijing – Tennis celebrates the Olympics'. Over 40 of the world's leading tennis players took part in the ITF project to help promote the 2008 Beijing Olympic Tennis Event.

The 140-page publication features a series of specially commissioned photographs of the game's top names dressed as athletes from other summer or winter Olympic sports. These are accompanied by interviews with the players talking about their Olympic memories and hopes for Beijing.







http://viewer.zmags.com/htmlCat/index_beta03.php?mid=gdtdh&pageid=0








The photographs were taken over a six-month period by some of the world's leading tennis photographers, with photo shoots held in venues as varied as Barcelona, Beijing, Dubai, Indian Wells, Los Angeles, Miami, Melbourne, Moscow, Netherlands, Palm Beach, Santiago, Shanghai and Tel Aviv.

Among the 44 players represented in the book are the two current world number ones, Roger Federer, who poses as a fencer, and Ana Ivanovic, who is shown playing beach volleyball, both in Miami. Rafael Nadal appears as a footballer on location in Shanghai, while Novak Djokovic takes advantage of Dubai's indoor ski slope.

Maria Sharapova takes time out from a photo shoot to try rhythmic gymnastics in Los Angeles, while Serena Williams demonstrates her ice skating abilities at home in Palm Beach. Olympic champions Nicolas Massu and Fernando Gonzalez become marathon runners on the streets of Santiago, while wheelchair world No. 1 Esther Vergeer shows her versatility as a basketball player in the Netherlands

# Enviado el miércoles 02 de julio de 2008 06:27

Wimbledon 2008

Wimbledon 2008
L'ancienne numéro un mondiale, qui avait remporté le tournoi en 2004, n'a jamais trouvé le bon rythme et a accumulé les fautes directes.

Revenue à 4-4 dans le deuxième set, elle a donné l'impression de pouvoir rebondir mais peu après, elle offrait une balle de match à son adversaire d'une double faute. Kudryavtseva se faisait un plaisir de conclure d'un coup droit gagnant.


Q. Have you got any explanation for what went on out there today?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I guess it wasn't my day. She just did everything better than I did. You know, she played much better. She hit the ball harder. She, uhm, you know, served and returned better.
On grass, you know those are two important elements. You know, once you don't have a lot on the ball then your opponent can take advantage of that. Obviously she had nothing to lose. She went for her shots. I was just pretty tentative.

Q. Is there any part of your game today you were happy with?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I can't be really happy about anything today.

Q. Why were you tentative?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Not sure. Very good question. A question I'll be asking myself later today.

Q. You suggested the other day that taking the time off between would be better, would be beneficial to you.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Hey, now I have more time off. Better be careful what I wish for.

Q. It seemed serving-wise you were a bit tentative. Going down the middle some. Didn't seem like backhand-wise you were feeling the stroke very well, just missing a couple inches on the cross-court.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Yeah, I think I just got to look at the tape of it to really see what went on, 'cause it just went a little too fast to analyze it right now.
But from my first thoughts when I went off court, I just thought that, you know, I wasn't playing my game. I was letting her take control of the majority of the points, yeah.

Q. With the time you took off after the French, did you see this coming at all? Did you have an inkling you might have a performance like this in you?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: You never know what you're going to have in you. I thought I played a really solid first round, felt pretty comfortable.
But, like I said, you just never know what's going to happen on a given day. You might go out there, not feel great, or your game's not quite there. Your opponent can take advantage of that, especially somebody that is playing a top player that has not much to lose. Sometimes those opponents are the most dangerous ones.

Q. Would you rate this defeat, given the fact it's at Wimbledon, as the most disappointing in recent years for you?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Losses are all disappointing, obviously. I try to sort of find a way to get back in the match, to sort of dig anywhere I could. But, you know, like I said, a loss is a loss. There's only one winner in the tournament and everybody else is disappointed, so I'm one of them.

Q. Are you fully fit?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Uh-huh.

Q. The talk about what you were wearing, the fashion, did that play a distraction for you?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: It's not the first time we've talked about what I was wearing. I've won plenty of tournaments with a lot of talk going on.

Q. Did you know much about her before? Had you seen her play? I know she played Venus tight last year in the first round.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Did she? I practiced with her a little bit at Fed Cup last year. I think I played her a couple of years ago on clay, and I won that match. You know, that was a couple of years ago and on a different surface, so...

Q. Will you reconsider your grass court preparation now for next season?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I don't think it really had anything to do with it. Just wasn't my day.

Q. Will you head straight home now, or will you have a few days in London?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I don't know. It's been 25 minutes since my match. I haven't really thought about it.

Q. Grass is one of the surfaces, if you're not playing that well, where things can go almost too quickly.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Absolutely.

Q. Especially it looked like on the court around the center stripes. The balls were just bouncing all over the place, on the lines, huh?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Yeah, I guess so. Some days they don't bounce where you want them to bounce or they don't land where you want them to land.

Q. What are your thoughts about replay at this point?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Replay?

Q. There was a key overrule there at the end, eighth game, was it, in the second set?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I don't think it had anything to do with the match.

Q. Did you think at that point maybe you were going to get a foothold and turn it around?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: What point are you talking about?

Q. Where the replay kept the game going.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: It was deuce. I think I won that game though, right?

Q. You wound up winning the game.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: That's one game I didn't lose.

Q. Pro players have so many hassles in their career, all the travel and the injuries, moments like this. What's the toughest part of being a pro tennis player? Is it losses like this or something else?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: Uhm, I mean, look, over my career, even though it's been pretty young, I still have many years ahead of me. I've had to deal with a lot of ups and a lot of downs on and off the court, and I have the experience behind me.
But I think the number one thing is not be discouraged by that, not be discouraged by losses or by negative things, things here and there.
You have to find a way to keep your head up even though it's pretty tough, because you put the effort in and you work hard and you dedicate yourself every single day to be a better player and a better professional.
Sometimes, you know, the work doesn't pay off till you never know when. I don't know when that work's gonna pay off.
I had a great off-season, came into Australia, and played really great tennis. Match in, match out, I felt great, was playing better and better. Things just worked out. Sometimes, you know, I've had experiences where I've done the same thing.
I've come into a tournament and results don't just come. It's not just for me. It's for everybody. Everybody goes through it. Everybody, you know, has those moments.
But, you know, I'm experienced enough to know that life goes on and that there are a lot worse things in life that can happen than losing a tennis match, even if it's at Wimbledon and even if it means a lot to me. There are a lot worse things.
I still have the desire, even 30 minutes after the match, to go back on court and to get better, 'cause that's the only thing that's gonna get me to hold that plate again.

Q. You seem a little bit bemused now. Underneath that are you hurting? You must be hurting.
MARIA SHARAPOVA: What do you think? I know you're not hurting for me, but...
I mean, look, a loss is a loss. It's part of my job. It's part of my job to lose and talk about it, you know.

Q. Ivanovic almost loses yesterday. You lose today. Does it say that people who think it's a clich�hat there really is depth on the women's tour are wrong, that some of these younger players or even veterans can actually really play and pull off big wins on the day?
MARIA SHARAPOVA: I've always said there's depth on the tour. I'm always asked about who's the bigger threat, who's your toughest opponent, who's your rivalry.
But at the end of the day it doesn't really matter. All that matters is on any given day you have to go out there, and whoever your opponent is, you have to beat them. Absolutely, I mean, everybody can present a challenge. Everybody has a lot of strength. Everybody is hungry. This girl that beat me today, she might not win the tournament, but she beat me, and it probably made her tournament.
That's the way things go, yeah.

# Enviado el miércoles 02 de julio de 2008 05:29

Roland Garros 2008

Roland Garros 2008
Malgré une balle de match en sa faveur au deuxième set (7-6, 5-3), Maria Sharapova a été éliminée lundi en huitièmes de finale, battue par une héroïque Dinara Safina, tête de série n°14 (6-7[6], 7-6[5], 6-2). Comme depuis le début de la quinzaine, la n°1 mondiale a commis trop de fautes pour inquiéter une Safina en pleine confiance. Il faudra encore attendre pour inscrire Roland-Garros à son palmarès... Beaucoup moins sûrement, pour perdre sa couronne.

Avant la sanction, Maria Sharapova avait reçu trois avertissements. D'abord face à la 106e joueuse mondiale, puis face à la 103e, difficilement battues en trois manches. Et dans une moindre mesure, face à Karin Knapp, tête de série n°32 (7-6, 6-0). Pendant ses trois premiers tours à Roland-Garros, la n°1 mondiale avait déjà montré des signes de faiblesses. Notamment au niveau du service, où elle accumulait les doubles-fautes (35 sur les trois premiers matches). Mais également sur ses déplacements, toujours approximatifs sur terre battue, et responsables de ses nombreuses fautes directes (40 en moyenne). Si sa ligne de statistiques affichée en huitièmes de finale est à peine meilleure (7 doubles, 39 fautes directes), le rang mondial de son adversaire était bien plus élevé, et rendait sa tâche plus délicate. D'autant plus que Dinara Safina arrivait lancée.


"J'ai eu beaucoup d'opportunités au cours de ce match", a reconnu la numéro un mondiale qui a eu une balle de match alors qu'elle menait 7-6 5-3 et a été à deux points de la victoire à 5-2 dans le tie-break du deuxième set.

"C'est un mauvais jour. Finalement, aujourd'hui, c'était un de ces jours où tout se combine pour que vous n'ayez pas vos chances et que l'on ne parvienne pas à conclure. Ce sont des choses qui arrivent."

Sharapova, dont le meilleur résultat à Roland-Garros reste une demi-finale perdue face à Ana Ivanovic l'an dernier, alors qu'elle a gagné les trois autres tournois du Grand Chelem, a reconnu que ce nouvel échec était "frustrant".

"En fin de compte, j'ai joué contre quelqu'un qui a connu de très belles réussites au cours des derniers mois sur terre battue et pourtant, le résultat a été très serré", a-t-elle cependant ajouté.

"Je serai triste les trois prochaines heures mais ne vous méprenez pas, je retournerai sur les courts quelle que soit la surface, herbe, surface dure, terre battue. Je m'entraînerai car un jour ou l'autre, cela finira par payer."

Tendue, elle a vertement répondu à une question sur l'attitude du public qui a pris le parti de Dinara Safina.

"Je ne peux pas plaire à tout le monde. Cela ne fait pas partie de mon contrat de travail", a-t-elle dit.

"Je suis une athlète. Je rentre sur le court et je donne tout ce que j'ai. Le public paie pour me voir jouer, c'est donc qu'il m'apprécie d'une façon ou d'une autre."

Elle s'est également indignée que lui soit posée une question sur la possibilité de perdre la première place mondiale si Ana Ivanovic, Jelena Jankovic ou Svetlana Kuznetsova gagnent le tournoi.

"Quand je suis sortie du court, ce n'était pas la première chose qui m'est venue à l'esprit", a-t-elle répondu.

"Je l'ai dit à plusieurs reprises, ce sont les résultats qui font le classement. Quand vous entrez sur le court, vous pensez simplement à gagner le match, car plus vous gagnez de matches, meilleur est le classement. C'est mon objectif, ma priorité. Cela a toujours été ainsi et cela le restera toujours."



TOO BAD



Je trouves que c'est vraiment dommage pour Maria car elle aurait pu aller loin malgre un mauvais debut à RG.
Tanpis , je compte sur elle l'annee prochaine et a Wimbledon elle va tout casser !



Maria
You've gotta see her
Go insane and out of your mind

# Enviado el martes 03 de junio de 2008 06:51

Modificado el miércoles 04 de junio de 2008 01:27

Roland Garros 2008

Roland Garros 2008
"C'est pour l'instant un tournoi assez bizarre pour moi avec toutes ces interruptions. Hier, j'ai plutôt bien joué vu les conditions. En me levant aujourd'hui j'avais l'impression que c'était un autre match, un autre tournoi. Très étrange. Mais l'important c'est d'être passée. Pour moi, ce sera toujours plus dur sur terre battue que sur toute autre surface. Je prends ces matches comme de l'entraînement, j'essaye d'en tirer des enseignements pour la suite."

La Russe Maria Sharapova, numéro 1 mondiale, s'est qualifiée pour le troisième tour en battant l'Américaine Bethanie Mattek en trois sets (6-2, 3-6, 6-2).

# Enviado el sábado 31 de mayo de 2008 05:32

Roland Garros 2008

Roland Garros 2008
Mercredi 28 mai 2008 , je suis entré dans le stade de Roland Garros à 10h30 , je stressai et 1/2 heure apres , j'ai vu Maria . Ca fait 2 années que j'ai de la chance de l'a voir vraiment de la chance , c'est dommage qu'elle n'a pas fait un match exeptionnel mais je l''aime tout de meme . C'etait MYTHIQUE.

"J'ai respiré le sable, j'ai senti le sable. Mais les conditions météo n'étaient bonnes ni pour moi ni pour mon adversaire...", a constaté Sharapova, bonne gagnante. Et de développer : "La semaine passée, j'ai pu m'entraîner dans des conditions remarquables. Aujourd'hui, c'est difficile. Le vent est capricieux. Et l'on se rend compte que l'on joue un jeu différent."


Son mode d'emploi, pour faire face aux éléments, relève de la méthode Coué : "J'essaie de rester positive, d'examiner la situation, et je me dis que les conditions météo sont un défi que je dois relever. Chaque joueur doit s'adapter et essayer de gagner." Aussitôt fait, aussitôt dit.
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# Enviado el sábado 31 de mayo de 2008 05:20