A: I think if I wouldn't be playing tennis I wouldn't be noticed at all,
right. So I think that I am here because of tennis and I am concentrating
only on tennis.
Q. How long did it take to you get over that injury that you had at
Eastbourne?
A: I played my first tournament last week and it was
eight weeks, I think, since Eastbourne, so...
Q. Can you tell us what you went through while you were rehabilitating?
A: Well, I was missing playing and I was just trying to stay active doing
some things, working out and doing roller-blading, all that, to be outdoors; not
to just stay home and do nothing. But I was definitely missing to play.
Q. How long before you could hold a racket again?
A: I started -- I played a tournament last week before last week before
the tournament, I probably practiced maybe ten days or something, a week. It was
two weeks ago I started playing.
Q. It was four or five weeks before you could pick up a racket?
A: Five or six.
Q. Were you surprised that it took so long to heal? When it
happened, you thought it would be okay the next day?
A: No, I didn't think it was going to be that bad, but kind of -- I
probably realized that it was not so good.
Q. Did it hurt
when you fell?
A: Yeah, I felt something different. Of course it hurt. It is
like you fell down and it felt like it was a bruise, like something like that.
Q. Considering you missed Wimbledon, which you play very well on grass,
how important is the US Open to play in?
A: Well, any tournament is real important, especially the Grand Slam.
So it is a major tournament.
Q. How important is it for you to do well this week with the Open only
about a week ago?
A: I hope to play as many matches as possible. It is a great
preparation. Also it is a great tournament here and I hope to play as many
matches as possible.
Q. How did you feel your game was last week?
A: Well, I think for the first week after not playing eight weeks I think
I played pretty well. I won two good matches and then played against
Conchita, so I think it was a good start for me.
Q. You mentioned this is a great tournament. The familiarity with
Lipton, part of reason you decided to come here?
A: Definitely, I feel like it is a little bit similar so I feel great.
It is a great atmosphere here. Very nice stadium.
Q. You beat Martina Hingis in Berlin; you know quite a lot about
her. Since you beat her she has had quite a lot of losses, a couple of them
surprising, the gap at the top now is quite small. What do you think
the reason is for that?
A: Well, I think that people get more used to her and playing against her
and they are probably getting more and more confident that she is beatable, like
anybody else, so that is why probably.
Q. Jennifer Capriati is playing in a qualifying here this weekend.
Do you feel it is important for younger players like yourself to learn from, I
mean, she has achieved a lot of success when she was very young and then she
really went through some tough times. Do you think it is important for
younger players like yourself to sort of learn some of the lessons from what she
went through?
A: I think that everybody is different and I try not to look at other
people, you know, I try to look at only good stuff from other people. It
can happen to anybody. It doesn't mean that anything that happens in
tennis means that it happens everywhere outside the sport, in the streets and
every where, so I don't really think about that. Everybody is totally
different. Everybody has different personality, different mentality and
everything.
Q. Does it sometimes to get old or bother you that the media, the public
kind of portrays you in the light that they do, as far as maybe not so much
focus on your tennis as opposed to everything else?
A: Like I said I wouldn't be here if I wasn't playing tennis, so, I
am here because of tennis.
Q. Do you mind all this, you smile and the cameras go off and I guess you
are pretty much a recognizable --
A: I wouldn't be No. 15 in the world -- if I would be No. 500 in the world,
nobody would care about me.
Q. Do you feel your game is making a lot of progress? Do you
believe
you are a Top 5 player or potential No. 1?
A: Well, I am practicing for it. I am going to work hard and I feel
that I feel confident that I can beat all the top players.
Q. What is it going to take for you to break into the Top 5, say?
A: Well, got to play a lot of matches and win a lot of matches.
Q. The impressions some of us had since you have been with Pavil is that
you were better able to think on your feet in a match and that you were able
to tactically be more complex. Can you tell us some of the things that he
has
been able to do for you since --
A: Of course it helps a lot, somebody is with you everyday; you work on
the same thing that you have been working for like last month or something, and
somebody is always with you and helping you and mentally and on the court and
off the court with everything.
Q. What do you think has made a real difference?
A: You can ask him.
Q. I will.
A: Can you go outside? I will answer. (laughter). They are all
scared now of Pavil.
Q. Leave the room. (Pavil exits interview room) What is the main
benefit he has given you apart from being with you?
A: Definitely he has so much experience. He is a very nice person.
He is really calm and relaxed always in any situation. Sometimes I am upset or
excited or something, he always calms me down.
Q. Tell us one aspect of your game he has helped you with in particular?
A: I think that he tried to improve my all-around game because I am a
playing -- I try to play on the whole court and come to the net and baseline so
I think that he has just improving everything just to bring my whole game
together.
Q. Is he good to practice with?
A: Yeah, he hits the ball quite well. Actually last time I beat him was
7-6. After eight weeks not playing.
Q. Was he still calm after that?
A: Not really. (Laughs).