Q. Anna, that was a tough match out there for you.
A. Yes, definitely. She's a great player, you know, she had a great French Open,
and she's a very tough player to play against on grass. She has a good slice
backhand, she's a lefty, a good serve. So it was a tough match, but I'm happy
that I went through the first round. That's the most important one.
Q. Were you a bit nervous to start with?
A. No, not really, not just nervous, but always you feel something when you go
out to play, and it's just you feel emotions when you go out to play, and
especially in the first round. It's tough a little bit every tournament to play
first rounds, especially at Wimbledon.
Q. Do you know that court's reputation?
A. No.
Q. It's supposed to be the graveyard court.
A. The what?
Q. The graveyard court. I don't know if you've ever played there before?
A. Yes, I've played there in juniors, many times.
Q. Can you tell us, did you find the extra press attention leading up to this
Wimbledon, have you found that it's put more pressure on you?
A. No, not at all.
Q. Have you not noticed it at all?
A. No, it's the same. No, I don't think about it at all. I just concentrate on
my tennis. I'm here to play, and I've just been practising, playing at
Eastbourne, and that's all.
Q. There was a story in the papers yesterday linking you romantically with
Ronaldo. Is there any truth in that at all?
A. No, the last time I saw him was the only time I saw him, at the French Open
last year, when we were just introduced to each other and that's all. That's the
one and only time I ever saw him, and I ever talked to him.
Q. Is your boyfriend here supporting you?
A. No, I don't have a boyfriend.
Q. Have you split up with Sergei?
A. No comment to that.
Q. How do you feel about your form at the moment?
A. Well, I think I'm playing good. I played a few matches at Eastbourne on grass,
so I'm feeling well. Like I said, I'm happy I'm through the first round. That's
the most -- that was the difficult one. You practise, you wait for the
tournament to start and it's good to play already and get it over with, and I'm
feeling good, I'm serving well, I served like 7 aces today, so I was happy with
that, and I am in pretty good shape.
Q. Do you find your doubles helps your singles play?
A. It always helps singles practice, and especially practice in doubles, playing
matches doubles, it's always great. It's good for rallies, and it's very good
mentally.
Q. If it's so good, why don't more men play in the doubles, do you think?
A. Because they play five sets, first of all, probably they get more tired.
Q. Anna, are you supporting the WTA's campaign for women to get equal prize
money with the men at Wimbledon?
A. Well, I think that yes, why not? I mean, if other tournaments do it, why not
this one do it either? But on the other hand, men play five sets, and there are
pluses and minuses in it. I'm not like on one side. It's hard to say. But we get
better ratings on the TV and stuff. But it's hard to say.
Q. Anna, you say you don't have a boyfriend right now. Would you like one, or
are you too busy?
A. I have no comment to that.
Q. Would you have liked to have made more volleys out there today?
A. Yes, but it was very difficult to go to the net from her kind of very low
shots. So if I would go to the net I would have to bring it up and she would
have easy passing shots. So I think I did just what I had to do to win. So that
was the most important for me.
Q. Do you think there's more to come from you? You played well enough to win
today, but you can play better than that, do you think?
A. Yes, for sure. I played well I think anyway, but against that player, like I
said, it was very hard to catch rhythm. You never know what to expect, good
serve, bad serve, but she's a good player, you know, and it was tough, no rhythm.
Q. You were a semi-finalist two years ago, couldn't play last year. Was that
really very painful, when you thought maybe you were on the brink of a title and
then you couldn't be here?
A. It was very just difficult, because I had a great experience, like you said,
in '97, and grass is my favourite surface, and last year I was playing very well
and beat Steffi at Eastbourne and I was really really looking forward to coming
back here, you know, for the first time after the semi-finals, and then it just
crashed, and I was very disappointed. I never had to pull out of events before
with an injury, so I didn't know how it is -- what's it like, and it was very
disappointed.
Q. What's your coaching situation right now, and how do you think that's working
out?
A. Well, right now I'm just working with a sparring partner, and I feel great.
It's how I used to be before. My Mum is helping me, and that's -- I like it the
way it is now.
Q. If you were to get to the final at Wimbledon, who would your preferred
opponent be in the final?
A. Well, I have to play Vento first, after tomorrow, and then I'll think about
who I will want to play.
Q. For a real show case confrontation in the final?
A. Well, I don't know. I didn't think about it. It's difficult to answer.
Q. You're playing doubles with Martina. What has that been like? What have you
picked up or learned from her from that experience?
A. Well, it's been great, and we have a great friendship, and we support each
other and help each other, and I learn a lot from her. So just playing, but
just, you know, some little things that I'm not going to tell you, but she's a
very nice person, and we just seem to be playing really well together. We lost
only one match, and we had a match point, so it's been great the way we've been
playing.
Q. Can you tell me a little bit about after her match against Steffi? You were
with her.
A. Yes.
Q. She talked a lot about that. She said you were very helpful to her. What was
your sort of feelings about that?
A. About that I was helpful, or about what?
Q. About the match, and about her afterward and sort of --
A. I think it's very hard to judge for anybody. I think the only two people that
really know how it is, and how emotional it was, was Steffi and Martina. So for
us, for everybody that even were just watching, it's very difficult to judge,
because the emotions that are going through -- we, the players, are going
through when we're going to play, they're completely different, you can never
control, you're in a different world, you just think about the ball and
something else, just how to beat the other person and win. So it's really
difficult for anybody to understand, even for me -- I'm a player -- to watch,
it's very difficult to understand. But I think, I don't know, I think that maybe
it could have been different, but you can't change it now. So we should forget
about it and just, you know, move on, because it's -- there is no reason to talk
about it any more, and that's all.
Q. What did you think of the way Martina behaved?
A. How did she behave?
Q. Well, what she did, how she reacted under that pressure of that match?
A. Well, I think anybody -- this was not something outrageous. We've seen
something crazy before, you know, like reacting to line calls, McEnroe, or
whoever, so I don't think it was something new for tennis, it was just something
new in women's tennis.
Q. Is it good for women's tennis?
A. I don't know.