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Q. Do you have yourself
on a schedule as far as your progress, say now, a year from now? JAMES BLAKE: No,
definitely not. I just try to improve every day, and every match try
to get a little better. Today I felt like there were a couple things
that he picked on to, you know, show me where my weaknesses are and
still need to keep working. Q. Today, when you
hit the ball short, especially early on, that's what you had to adjust
here? (Inaudible)? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
I mean, the ball bounced up pretty high on these courts, I felt like.
He definitely took advantage of that. He's a little bit smaller. So
the slice, he would use the fact that he's not as big to get down to
those, and stay down on them. As soon as he got up, he could take it
from above his shoulders. He was really ripping it. I don't think he
missed -- I mean, barely missed any of those forehands when he had time
to set up until finally at 1-Love in that tiebreaker, maybe just missed
it by an inch. Got maybe a little ahead of himself or went for too much
or something. Q. A few years ago
you and Andy Roddick, Mardy Fish, were kind of like frolicking in your
backyard playing tennis. Now here, this is your playground. Talk about
what that means? JAMES BLAKE: I'm
still having fun like it is just in the backyard. It's great to get
all this attention now and get fans actually knowing who you are and
not asking for autographs then saying, "What's your name?" Q. Will you practice
at all together this week? JAMES BLAKE: If
the schedule works out right and we're practicing at similar times,
yeah, definitely. I mean, I practice with Mardy probably more than anyone
else on tour. He stays at my house usually when we're training. We practice
at Saddlebrook just about every day. I definitely hit with him well.
Our coaches are all friends. Now that we're kind of at these kind of
tournaments, the coaches end up organizing the practices a lot more.
Our coaches are always talking and they're setting up practice for us. Q. Where is the
house? You're all in Saddlebrook? JAMES BLAKE: I live
in Tampa, just outside of Saddlebrook, about ten minutes away from it.
It's great for me. Training at Saddlebrook has everything I could need
- a great facility, my trainer, Mike Nichlahara (phonetic spelling),
works there, so it's perfect. There's every surface of court there.
And a lot of great, great players come through there. So it's perfect
for me. Q. Do you see any
comparison between your group and Chang and Courier? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
it seems like we're getting that comparison. But that's, to me, along
with not setting ranking goals, things like that, I'm not going to try
to compare myself to any other people. I never tried to mold my game
after anyone specific. I tried to do what came naturally to me. I don't
think we can say we're going to be like those guys. It's pretty tough
to live up to. I mean, 13 Slams from Pete, seven from Andre, one from
Chang, what was it, four or five from Courier. I mean, that's pretty
staggering numbers. Q. Last two matches,
you lost in the first round. Just a spotty period you went through,
or something you figured out today? JAMES BLAKE: No,
it was just something -- it's taken me a while to get to this point.
I think it's because I'm trying to learn from each match. And I never
have been in the finals of a tournament before. When I played Memphis,
then going to San Jose, going all the way across the country for that,
I felt like I played pretty well, but definitely not as well as in Memphis.
Then, you know, you know, I think maybe that took a little more out
of me mentally than I really realized. Q. What do you have
to do in this tournament to get into the fourth-round, quarterfinals? JAMES BLAKE: Win
a couple more matches (laughing). I'm not looking towards the fourth
round or towards the quarters or anything. I'm playing Fabrice Santoro
next, who's a guy that is very tough to prepare for. I've never played
him before. But just watching him play, there's no one else on tour
that plays like him. So I'm just worried about that match. If I can
get through that, then I'll worry about the next one. It's kind of unfair
to look past a player like that, so I'm just going to look at that match. Q. In your development
as a player? JAMES BLAKE: As
a player, I feel like, I don't know, I feel like I'm getting better.
So I don't really know. I don't necessarily know how good I am. I'm
just trying to get better. Every match I go out there, it kind of surprises
me and it lets me know how good I am. Seems like each time it's testing
myself, seeing if I can, you know, come through in a tight match against
Galo Blanco, someone who's been on tour for a long time; if I can beat
Jan-Michael Gambill twice in a row when it's much more difficult that
second time in a few weeks. Sometimes I'm going to pass, sometimes I'm
going to fail. From each of them I'm going to learn. Q. Do you have any
feelings as far as surfaces right now? Are you going to be going to
the clay in Europe? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
I'm going to be going to the clay. I definitely don't feel as comfortable
on clay, because most of the Americans grew up on hardcourts. I grew
up on hardcourts, especially indoor courts because I was in New England. Q. Did Roddick dominate
the matches between you and him and Fish? Did you all kind of beat up
on each other? JAMES BLAKE: Roddick's
taken me out the last three times I think. We had a real battle in Memphis,
it was 7-5 in the third. I was up a break in the third set. That match
really could have gone either way. He played better on a couple points,
and that was it. I got a little nervous maybe because it was my first
final. He's been there before. Q. Give us some
dirt when you guys lived together. Was he a slob? Did he leave the cap
off the toothpaste? JAMES BLAKE: I actually
never lived with Roddick. Mardy lived with Andy. Mardy stays with me
a lot. He is a slob, yes. He's - I don't know - I'm not going to give
you guys any dirt (laughing). Q. Have you thought
much about the next Davis Cup tie in Houston, where you might fit in
in that? JAMES BLAKE: Wherever
they need me. I'm always open. As soon as Patrick gives me a call, it's
-- he never really even needs to. Just if he wants me to be there, I'll
be there. Q. Do you have any
empathy for him because Martin's playing well now, Jan-Michael is playing
better. It's not so cut-and-dried who he picks. JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
I mean, I do have some empathy in the fact that it's a tough decision
but that's his job, to make these tough decisions. I think it's a much
better decision to make with a few guys playing really well than "Who
am I going to pick? There's no one playing really well." Q. He certainly
built the camaraderie up for Davis Cup that might have been lacking
in the last two years? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah.
I mean, every time I've gone, I went as a practice partner under Tom
Gullikson, and there was enthusiasm there. I had a great time. Q. How many years
did you complete at Harvard? Do you intend on going back? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
I went for two years. I plan on going back whenever I'm done playing
tennis. They have a great policy of taking you back whenever, you just
have to let them know six months in advance. When this whole tennis
thing is over, I'll be back in the dorms probably. Q. How is your brother? JAMES BLAKE: My
brother's doing well. I practiced with him a lot last week as well.
He hits the ball great in practice. He was, to be honest, he was beating
up on me. And he's -- I think it's just going to take more matches for
him. He took so long off because of his wrist injury that he just doesn't
have the match experience. When he gets into a match, I think he feels
like it's such a big opportunity that he ends up playing very tentative.
And I know where he's coming from. I went through that my whole first
year on tour. I felt like every opportunity I got, I had to advantage
of. I didn't want to mess it up. Q. You said you
learn from every match. Can you talk about your most recent match in
Australia. Has that match in any way kind of fueled your play this year
or tell you some value that you've been able to convert ? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
that taught me that the guys out here are too proud and too good of
competitors to ever give up. Stefan never gave up. Was up two sets and
a break, and he was still getting pumped up. He didn't hang his head,
he didn't get down on himself, he didn't start tanking. That's something
I learned there. Q. One last question,
I know in the introduction of the match today it was mentioned that
you donated money to an inner-city tennis facility. Was that the first
time you did that? If it wasn't, why did you choose this particular
facility? JAMES BLAKE: Well,
the Ashe- Buchholz facility, I was told actually by -- my agent brought
it to my attention that this is a charity down here in the Miami area,
and obviously having Arthur Ashe's name involved in it made a difference
to me. He was a role model to me. Butch Buchholz has been great to me,
giving me a wildcard in the qualifying and wildcards into doubles. Q. This is your
first donation that you made to a charity? JAMES BLAKE: Yeah,
I think so. I haven't had a whole lot of money before, before this,
to donate. I think I've donated, you know, when they send those Habitat
for Humanity things to your house, a few of those. But nothing this
substantial. So it feels great to give to charity. |