MARTINA HINGIS
08/30/2006
An interview with : Martina HINGIS
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. Talk about the experience of being out there after a while?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, it's just, first of all, the energy of New York itself,
it's already great. And then walking on to the stadium, it was amazing.
I was nervous in the beginning.
Well, then that was a little bit
nervous about hurricane, too. Just really the fans have been great.
Sometimes you ask yourself after the first set, without the fans if you
could still pull it out. I don't know. They just really carried me. It
was a great atmosphere, once you're winning anyway.
Q. Andre said
in his match when he was down he paid great tribute to the fans, as you
just did. Said how much they can really bring you back and help you to
fight. Have you been feeling that since your comeback?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Yeah, every time, wherever I play, you know, each country has
been very, you know, welcoming my game and myself, you know. It's just
been a tremendous ride so far the last seven months.
And every
time I lose, I feel like, you know, I let down somebody. But the
players I've lost to, there's no shame, no blame. So I try my best.
Even today, sometimes after you're losing 6 4, you still kind of want
to carry on. But really the fans, you know I made some good points and
they gave me some more vibe and energy.
Q. After the match you said you played left handed when you were a kid. How old were you? How many times did you play?
MARTINA
HINGIS: I was like seven, I believe. I had a broken little, you know,
pinky. So for a month I mean, the tournament started within like 12 two
weeks or, you know, almost 20 days, I don't know. I'm not sure anymore.
I picked up, you know, my racquet into the left hand because I
really had to play that tournament in my hometown. We were like, Okay,
what now? It's broken, so I couldn't play with my right.
So we
started playing. But after ten minutes, my arm got tired. So, you know,
we just carried on, having breaks. Maybe five, six times a day, ten
minutes first day, 20 minutes second day. I just got better quickly.
You
know, at the end I even start serving from top. Maybe second still from
the bottom. I made the finals, and the girl didn't want to play me
because she didn't want to be beaten by me left handed, so... we played
the finals like next week. I end up winning the tournament left handed
because I got myself into the finals.
Q. You didn't try to play ambidextrous, both hands, after that?
MARTINA
HINGIS: No, but it was a great experience. Sometimes, you know, for
fun, you know, when you are like four, five hours out there, you still,
you know, carry on and play some lefty games or just some shots. I
always enjoy that because it just mixes up the feelings.
Even like
in practice sometimes you can't really reach for that sometimes high
backhand. I knew I'm not gonna get there, so I've done that in the past
a little more often to get to the ball. I would never have thought that
it's gonna work, but I'm like...
I wasn't gonna lose that point no matter what, so might as well try. Go for it, and it worked.
Q. Is tennis more fun now that you're not the prohibitive favorite, you've been away from the game?
MARTINA
HINGIS: It is in one way. On the other hand, everybody's just like
rough every first round. Anybody can go out there and bite you. I
think, you know, in the beginning they were still, you know there was
this kind of respect. They didn't know what to expect from me. But now
they have been watching me, what my strength and weaknesses are, and I
think she really played great today.
I mean, I couldn't really
read her. I've never seen her before. I mean, I've seen her before, but
never played her. It took me a while to get adjusted because, I mean, I
just you know, John just told me she was the only player to win against
Kim Clijsters last year.
She had maybe some issues, some injuries
and all these things. She was on the way up, but something stopped her.
But I definitely think that, you know, she has a good future.
Q. Would you agree that the level of women's tennis for those years you didn't play has picked up?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, it's deeper. I mean, it's probably
Q. More good players today?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Yeah, there is probably the top 5, they're somewhere else. Then
there's five to ten and there is a break. Sometimes one point can turn
around things. That's the difference.
But from 10 to, you know, 50
or a hundred, there's really no big difference. On a given day, anybody
can win. That's really that, you know sometimes those little things can
change and turn around matches. That's why there's a top 5, 10, and
everything else.
Q. You were great from the net today. Was that part of your strategy?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, I had to do something. I had to start pushing because I
was getting there too much into defense because I was short. Then I had
to take my chances and change it because, you know, if I might go and
lose, might do the fashion, and I wasn't really willing to do that.
Q.
Do you feel, considering what your expectations were coming back on to
the tour, that you've exceeded your expectations thus far?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, Mary Joe asked me that on court. I was like my answer was
at the end yes and no, because I felt that there was this opening
because a lot of the players were injured or not playing, or the ones
I've played.
And some of them are still at the top, like Mauresmo,
Lindsay, Patty Schnyder, No. 6 in the world. That gave me hope and
chance to maybe survive, as well. There was no difference, I don't
think, in their games. Just like more consistent, more brains, and just
being smart with picking up the schedule and choosing the tournaments.
I think, you know, if you're just consistent with your results you can make it very far, and I've proved that again, you know.
Q.
If you were today, today's Martina Hingis, were to play Martina Hingis
when you were dominating the tour, how do you think the match would
turn out?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, I was given this question a few
times. I really don't know. I would say the Martina today is definitely
better in a lot of the things than what I used to be. I mean, I might
not be as quick, but you have to adjust to the game today.
I don't think I would have won matches the way I played, you know, when I played in the past because it's just gotten faster.
I
mean, I played some shots today which I wouldn't go for in the past,
and maybe some I miss because I really don't get there. You know, I
don't position myself as well as I used to. But it's really a hard
thing to say. I don't know.
Q. It would go deep into the third set?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Yeah, but I think the Martina has to be better than the one
before; otherwise, I wouldn't be back winning matches today.
Q. Doesn't Martina today appreciate tennis more than Martina of past years?
MARTINA
HINGIS: I don't know. Maybe I go through more emotions today. I don't
know. But there is a lot of things which go through my mind playing
matches like today. I was like, Okay, after losing the first set. I
mean, can't be happening, you know, after making quarters and quarters,
both Grand Slams, and then losing third round. I mean, I would lose
here in the first round. I was like, No way that's going to happen.
I
just didn't want to yeah, there's a lot of question marks sometimes,
but then winning, ending up winning these matches definitely keeps me
going and motivated even more because I know that I'm going the right
direction and playing well.
I played very well in the second and
third set. I was able to pick it up. It's just sometimes it's the
physical question, can I last. I definitely did today. I outlasted her,
basically, today.
Q. In February and March you were saying that
maybe one of the advantages you had coming back was that not that many
players on the tour now understand strategy and how to play strategic
tennis. Now it's September. Anybody out there who has surprised you?
Can you handicap this field now and say, Okay, now I know how these
girls are playing. These two or three maybe are better than I thought,
and these two or three I think I could take them? Give me a sense on
what you think now.
MARTINA HINGIS: You constantly want to get
better. People I've lost to, like Kim three times, or Maria, beat her,
lost to her. Those are matches you just look forward to and you have to
play. If you want to beat them, you have to get better.
Q. Are those the girls to beat, you've had the hardest time with?
MARTINA
HINGIS: I mean, obviously, yeah. I lost to Kim in both the Grand Slam
quarters. And now Ana, I think she's playing very well, Ivanovic. We'll
see how far it's going to take her. She's still young, has got
potential. I think her coach right now is doing a good job working with
her. I told him he's worked with me in the past, so he really learned
quickly and he's giving it over to her. I was like, that's not good. He
found a good strategy, but...
Q. Where does Justine fit in in the hierarchy for you?
MARTINA
HINGIS: She won the French three times. Watching her last week winning
New Haven, she's really on top of the game. Amélie, going through
today, winning two Grand Slams. That's what I count on. Amélie,
Justine, Kim are the top, three, four, with Maria along the top
players, maybe Kuznetsova who are besides the rest.
Q. Are you
positive you have a higher level left? And if you do have that higher
level, can you really contend here beyond quarterfinals?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, that's what I'm, you know, working on. That's what I hope
for. I mean, that's definitely a physical question at the end of the
day. I mean, you know, grinding through the matches like today, and,
you know, you have to come back tomorrow and play another good match,
otherwise it's not going to happen.
But other players are in the
same situation, so I'm not the only one, you know. Facing Razzano
tomorrow, I don't know how she did. She won easily?
THE MODERATOR: Straight sets.
MARTINA
HINGIS: I have to regenerate, regroup. That's the Grand Slams. In a
way, I like Grand Slams because they don't always give you a day off in
between and you have another extra day to rest. But physically to just
keep up with the girls, that's the main goal.
I think my tennis is
better than most of them but, you know, physically I have to get myself
into the position to be able to play it, too.
Q. You are very smart, someone yelled out during the match. Did you hear that? Did it impact your match?
MARTINA HINGIS: I guess a lot of people heard it, yeah. It was just a funny comment.
Q.
As a 25 year old woman looking back at what you did as a 16 year old
girl, I mean, think back to '97 and just your perspective now on how
remarkable that was, what you were able to do.
MARTINA HINGIS:
Yeah, it was almost ten years. You're kind of in that streamline and
you don't look right or left. It's just happening. I was winning. That
year I won 12 out of 20 tournaments or something. So it was just kind
of, you know, just another Grand Slam, another tournament I won.
Playing
Venus in the finals, we were the youngest finalists in history. I mean,
that's a great result to look back at now, today. I'm proud of it.
Q. (Inaudible)?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, you maybe want to make me feel old.
Q. You're still very young?
MARTINA HINGIS: Yeah, I mean. For life, I've been outside this life, so I know how that is and I'm not afraid of it.
Q. When you left the tour there was not a Chinese player in sight.
MARTINA
HINGIS: There weren't that even many Russians. They were just coming
up. I lost three in a row. I'm like, Okay, this is not good.
I
think with having the goal and the sights they have for Beijing, for
the Olympics, they do anything. It's great, a country like China can be
the host and willing to go all the way.
08/31/2006
M. HINGIS / Shuai Peng
THE MODERATOR: Questions for Martina, please.
MARTINA HINGIS: Thank God there's not many people here anymore.
Q. Were you surprised to see her playing that well?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, I think it's not only that she played well, but I didn't
play good. I think I let her play well, and then she just, yeah, opened
up, lost the fear, and played exceptional.
I mean, we know that she can play and beat some good players every now and then.
Q. Do you have an explanation for the reason why you were not playing so well tonight?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Well, I think after yesterday I didn't have much more to give.
I was a little flat and tired mentally. Just I don't know. Just wasn't
feeling well. Wasn't my day. I don't know.
You know, in the
beginning, I started out well the first service game. That's not
unusual. After that, uhm, maybe sometimes you think like the opponent
is gonna hand it to you, but she didn't.
I think the difference is
now that I'm back in the top 10. I'm the player people have seen me
around, and they have nothing to lose anymore compared to when I
started the year.
Q. Where do you take your comeback from here? This is your earliest exit ever at the US Open. What's next?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, I mean, uhm, that's a good question. I mean, I can't answer that right now to you. I mean, we'll see.
Q. Are you going to try to qualify for the season ending championships?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Oh, yeah, that's the ultimate goal, but I think I have to think
over some things and, you know, just, uhm, get through the next weeks
and then get ready for indoors.
Q. Obviously, you didn't want to
play back to back days, but were you at least pleased to see that you
were going to play on Arthur Ashe Stadium tonight in front of a big
crowd?
MARTINA HINGIS: Oh, yeah. I mean, I wish I had played a
better match here in front of a stadium like that. Maybe it would have
been better I played some Court 10 or something (laughing).
Q. When you came back from 5 1 to 5 4 in the second set, you could believe that it was getting
MARTINA
HINGIS: I mean, still not easy to finish off matches against top
players. I mean, yeah. I mean, I've struggled with that when I came
back now. I mean, I had some opportunities against Amélie and didn't
make it.
You know, you sometimes believe you know, doubt yourself. Can you really make it and close it?
She
served well the last game. I mean, I still had some openings,
opportunity, but I should have, you know, done that a lot sooner than,
you know, at 5 1 being down.
Q. And is it the most disappointing loss of the year for you so far?
MARTINA
HINGIS: Uhm, in a way, yes, and no because, I mean, since Wimbledon I
have not had the results maybe I would have thought I would. Well, I
don't know. Yeah, maybe Wimbledon was more disappointing because that
was the first time I lost to a lower ranked player. I hope I'm not
getting used to this habit, yep.
Q. After the first set of your
match yesterday you said that you changed your strategy up a bit. You
came to net a little bit more. Did you try to do anything tonight after
dropping the first set?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, I tried to come in
but, I mean, you still have to, you know, be aggressive but still keep
the ball within the lines, still be in control. You know, sometimes
today I tried it, and I had some good points, but she wouldn't let me.
Yesterday,
I was able to dig in deep, and today, you know, she had a better
answer. I mean, we have to say definitely she played a great match,
yeah.
Q. But this was a match you felt like you should have won?
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, I mean I don't know what she's ranked. A lot of you probably know.
Q.
100, but she had an injury. She had a stress fracture in the beginning
of the year, and then again after the French Open. So she started to
play without any pain in August. Now she can play her best game.
MARTINA
HINGIS: Yeah, well, I mean, she's I've played a lot of tennis lately in
the last couple months, a lot of hard courts. Even like I don't think
I've had a day off since, so I think now I will have some days off
which I didn't want to have.
Q. When you retired, you obviously
had an injury, but you realized you couldn't compete power wise with a
lot of the players. When you came back, you said that your mind would
separate you from the other players. Did your thinking out there let
you down tonight?
MARTINA HINGIS: Yeah, I tried a couple dropshots
early on and they both were like, yeah... I can't explain. I mean, that
kind of set me back. I'm like, Okay, I definitely have to try to do
something different. I mean, this is not working today. It worked
yesterday against Shuai Peng. Sometimes like I feel like I'm hitting a
lob and she still didn't get there.
But today against Virginie I
couldn't allow myself to have any because of the or leave her any
openings. She was very solid from both sides. There wasn't much I could
do sometimes.
Q. Would you reevaluate this comeback. I know in the beginning of this press conference
MARTINA
HINGIS: This is probably not the best day to ask. I mean, you can't
just be down on yourself all the way because you lose a match here at
the US Open. So, you know, I mean, you know, I have my people around
me, my support system, so we just definitely have to step back and see
how it's you know, what we'll do in the next days, next weeks, next
months.
Q. Did you ever think when you came back in January that you would be in the top 10 by the US Open?
MARTINA
HINGIS: I was hoping for it, but if it's going to happen, I didn't
know. I'm definitely happy after that was a huge match for me, playing
Kuznetsova, making in the quarters in Montreal. After that, you know,
still winning the semis where I don't think I was at the best after
that night, but still winning somehow.
I went back home and, yeah,
I don't know. It's just too much tennis. I mean, there's not much I can
explain right now. I mean, it's just I wasn't as fresh mentally as I
normally go into Grand Slams. It was a tough match yesterday, and
coming out there today again and playing Virginie, she's not going to
hand it to me, and she didn't.
Q. Between Wimbledon and Montreal, what did you do?
MARTINA HINGIS: I played one match, yeah. I played San Diego and I had a week off. I played Montreal, week off, and here.
Q.
When you walked off the court at the 2002 US Open after you lost to
Monica Seles, did you have any idea at the time the next time you would
be here would be nearly four years later?
MARTINA HINGIS: No, I
mean, you don't think that far ahead what's going to happen. Definitely
not like it's gonna take three years or what will happen, you know. I
still somehow that year I had tough three setters also getting to the
fourth round and playing Monica. At that time it was disappointing to
lose to her because I haven't lost to her in, you know, a few matches.
I
don't know. The surface is quite fast. I mean, it's like in the
beginning of the year, the Rebound Ace is a little slower. On clay you
have more time. I feel right now if you don't serve well, don't return
well, if you're not aggressive enough, I mean, you can't just do it
with a passive game. I mean, you definitely have to change something on
that.
Q. Do you feel lucky to be here? Monica Seles, she's trying to come back, but it probably won't happen. Do you feel fortunate
MARTINA HINGIS: Well, she's 32 years old. I'm 25, so it's a little bit of difference. 26 next month, so...
I don't want to really compare myself with her yet.
FastScripts by ASAP Sports...
Was it the worst match of Martina Hingis’ hall-of-fame caliber career? Probably too strong a statement, but it was certainly one of the most disappointing and unexpected.
Hingis was exposed in Arthur Ashe Stadium Thursday night, falling to unseeded Frenchwoman Virginie Razzano in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4, ending her brief stay at the US Open.
“Well, I think it's not only that she played well, but I didn't play good,” Hingis lamented. “I think I let her play well, and then she just opened up, lost the fear, and played exceptional. I think after yesterday I didn't have much more to give. I was a little flat and tired mentally.”
Left to rethink the future of her second-winded career choice after making a celebrated return to tour play in January, the eighth-seeded Swiss was non-committal following the match, waiting for a more lucid moment before making a decision on her future.“This is probably not the best day to ask,” said Hingis, the 1997 US Open women’s champion, after suffering her earliest exit ever in New York, dropping her career record in New York to 41-8.
“I mean, you can't just be down on yourself all the way because you lose a match here at the US Open. I have my people around me, my support system, so we just definitely have to step back and see what we'll do in the next days, next weeks, and next months.”
Participating in her first US Open since 2002, the year in which she lost to Monica Seles in the fourth round of the tournament (in an ironic twist, Seles’ second-to-last career match at the Open), Hingis was flat from the get-go.
Playing in her second match in as many days after outlasting Shuai Peng in three scratchy sets on Wednesday at Louis Armstrong Stadium, Hingis appeared careless and lackadaisical, reflected the most in her paltry service game.
"I wish I had played a better match here in front of a stadium like that,” Hingis mused. “Maybe it would have been better if I played at Court 10 or something.”
Unable to hold serve throughout the course of the match, Hingis won a meager 32 percent of her second serves as Razzano attacked mercilessly and was rewarded to the tune of six for six on break point chances.
Three straight breaks of serve in the first set by Razzano set the tone for the match. Jumping out to a 4-2 lead, Razzano sewed up the set after back-to-back double faults in the seventh game by Hingis.
“Yesterday, I was able to dig in deep, and today, she had a better answer,” Hingis said.
Broken in the first and third games of the second set, Hingis dug a hole that even her great cerebral tactics couldn’t scheme a way out of, gift-wrapping Razzano with a double-break cushion, easing the Frenchwoman's tensed nerves as she completed the upset.