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		<title>John McEnroe Analyzes James Blake&#8217;s Career</title>
		<link>http://thebiofile.com/2010/03/john-mcenroe-analyzes-james-blakes-career/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Mar 2010 19:38:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scoop Malinowski</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[ 
At a recent tennis event, I asked John McEnroe to discuss the struggles of James Blake who has recently dropped out of the top 50 in the ATP rankings.
&#8220;I think it&#8217;s amazing he got to #4 in the world,&#8221; says McEnroe. &#8220;His speed was one of the greatest I&#8217;ve ever seen. So that was a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-size: x-small;"> </p>
<p>At a recent tennis event, I asked John McEnroe to discuss the struggles of James Blake who has recently dropped out of the top 50 in the ATP rankings.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think it&#8217;s amazing he got to #4 in the world,&#8221; says McEnroe. &#8220;His speed was one of the greatest I&#8217;ve ever seen. So that was a great weapon. But he plays one way. The best guys have a little more variety, they have more options. When he goes at you, he&#8217;s like the guy that throws the 98 mile per hour fastball, 96, there&#8217;s days when he&#8217;s unhittable and he&#8217;ll beat anybody. But to consistently do that is quite difficult to win seven matches in a major. I think his best chance was that match with Andre (at U.S. Open 2005 QF) when he was up two sets and a break in the third. I think he had a break in the fifth also. And he lost 7-6 in the fifth 63 63 36 36 67). That was probably one of the best matches he&#8217;s ever been involved with. But he came up short. He played Roger close a couple of times on hard courts, I think he played him in the quarterfinal once or twice. So, I mean, you&#8217;re talking two of the best players &#8211; you put Roger as the best, Andre at worst, you&#8217;re not gotta put him below top six or eight.. So you&#8217;re talking about incredible players that he lost to. And he wasn&#8217;t as comfortable on other surfaces. He didn&#8217;t make the adjustments. At this point it would be a tall order to put him in mind to make a deep run into a major.&#8221;</p>
<p>Blake, now 30, is ranked #52, has won 10 career ATP singles titles. He has not made a significant run at a Grand Slam or Masters Series event since making the semis at the 2008 Paris Indoors (lost to Tsonga). The flashy American is now coached by former ATP pro Kelly Jones since after the 2009 U.S. Open.</p>
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		<title>Marcelo Rios: The Mysterious Champion</title>
		<link>http://thebiofile.com/2010/01/marcelo-rios-the-mysterious-champion/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Jan 2010 18:32:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scoop Malinowski</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[
&#8220;Be not afraid of greatness: some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them.&#8221; — Shakespeare. 
&#8220;There is no great genius without some touch of madness.&#8221; — Seneca.
No tennis player ever awed us with his beautiful talents quite like Marcelo Rios. Even his name flowed smoothly, like that of some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><div id="attachment_266" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 154px"><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/McEnroeRios1.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-266" title="McEnroeRios[1]" src="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/McEnroeRios1.jpg" alt="Rios meets John McEnroe." width="144" height="109" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Rios meets John McEnroe.</p></div></em></p>
<p><em>&#8220;Be not afraid of greatness: some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them.&#8221; — Shakespeare. </em></p>
<p><em>&#8220;There is no great genius without some touch of madness.&#8221; — Seneca.</em></p>
<p>No tennis player ever awed us with his beautiful talents quite like Marcelo Rios. Even his name flowed smoothly, like that of some legendary artist from centuries ago. The great Rios turned pro in 1994 and went on to win 18 career singles titles, including five Masters Series. He produced his finest season in 1998, capturing three consecutive Masters Series titles (Indian Wells, Key Biscayne and Rome) along with four other titles. Rios even became No. 1 — at the age of 22 — for six weeks after conquering Andre Agassi in a captivating performance on Key Biscayne to become the first South American to rise to the top of the ATP rankings. But for how familiar we were with the Rios style on the court — that leaping two-handed backhand, the graceful and artful movements, those uncanny angles, the Chilean chanting from his flag-waving supporters — there was always an aura of mystery about Rios. Why did he seem so often to be joyless on the court? For what reasons was he so reluctant to do media interviews or engage with the fans or even other players? Was his reputation for being unapproachable an act of self-defense because he was actually very shy? The enigma of Rios will continue to confound us now that he retired (due to repeated leg and back injuries) in 2004 from professional tennis at the age of 28.</p>
<p> His last ATP matches were in April of 2004, losses in Satellite events in Ecuador and Mexico City to Mariano Delfino and Juan Pablo Guzman. Suddenly the career of Rios was over, without any final applause or a befitting tribute. Even the idea for this article only came by a chance comment during an unrelated interview with former Australian Open winner Thomas Johansson. The Swede just so happened to share this anecdote of Rios when I asked him for a funny tennis memory, something from tennis that made him laugh: &#8220;All the guys have different humors, outside of the court,&#8221; Johansson said. &#8220;A player that I really liked to watch was Rios. I think he was one of the best players, ever. Because I remember one year when he was gonna play Thomas Muster in Rome. And I saw the press conference before the match. And they asked him, so how are you gonna be able to beat Muster, because he only had lost one or two matches on clay so far. And Rios said, ‘The guy should be happy if he gets like a couple of games.’And Rios went out there the next day and killed him, 1 and 2. And that&#8217;s for me unbelievable. I really liked to watch him. I didn&#8217;t like to play him though. But I really liked to watch him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Asked why he didn’t enjoy the experience of playing Rios, Johansson replied: &#8220;He could make you feel like it was the first time you were standing on a tennis court, you know [smiling]? So I hated to play him. You could get killed by him easily, 1 and 1 or something like that, and you could have played a good match.&#8221;</p>
<p>Johansson&#8217;s high regard for Rios sparked a curiosity to investigate further insights about Rios from others in the tennis community. If a Grand Slam champion like Thomas Johansson had such respect for Rios, just what else would some of the other ATP insiders have to say? So here&#8217;s an interesting and insightful collection of memories and lasting images of one of the great tennis players of this modern era — Marcelo Rios:</p>
<p>Jimmy Arias, former No. 4 in the world: &#8220;My one memory of Marcelo Rios is — I was retired for a number of years already — and he was ranked No. 2 in the world in 1998. And he lost first round of Wimbledon. And made some disparaging remarks about Wimbledon. He came to Bollettieri&#8217;s because he had to practice for the rest of the summer. And I was the only one there. Everyone else that played was still at Wimbledon. So I was a decent enough player for him to practice with. So Nick called, ‘Can you come? Marcelo Rios is here for a couple of weeks?’ So we play the first day, the first set — and he&#8217;s not trying at all [smiles]. He&#8217;s just sort of lounging around. And I win the set 6-4. And as is my way, when I play a top guy of today, I find a way to give them a little jab, just to see how they react. So we finish the set and as we&#8217;re shaking hands after, I said, ‘Marcelo, what would you rank me if I were playing today? Two or three in the world?’ And he said, ‘Man, tomorrow, I&#8217;m going to kick your ass!’And I liked his attitude. And actually, some of the top players, when I give them a hard time, they actually didn&#8217;t want to play with me anymore. When I would say something like that, they would get insulted. They didn&#8217;t want to play with me. Rios came at me. He said, ‘No, I&#8217;m gonna kick your ass tomorrow.’ And sure enough, we came back the next day, and for about three games, he was fired up. And I was playing well and was down 3-love. And he couldn&#8217;t keep that intensity, because it&#8217;s practice. He&#8217;s just so relaxed. Eventually the set was close. But I did see for those three games what talent he had. He would hit a couple of forehands in a rally, and with that same swing — not a bigger backswing, nothing — he&#8217;d suddenly hit it 20 miles-per-hour harder. Down the line for a winner. You didn&#8217;t know how that happened. You couldn&#8217;t understand how the same swing produced such a different pace on the ball. So that&#8217;s part of what he had that the other players couldn&#8217;t figure out.&#8221;</p>
<p> Hernan Gumy, former top 50 ATP player from Argentina: &#8220;I have a personal memory about him because we were kind of close. He didn&#8217;t get along with many players. But we were kind of friends in a way. And we play against each other many times. The greatness of his game — I didn&#8217;t see anybody who play like him in the past 10 years. All the most difficult things he made it easy. I mean, it was so nice to watch him play. It would have been great to have him for a couple of more years. He&#8217;s still young but, every time I spoke with him, he said that he was not made to travel 25 weeks a year. Or play 20 tournaments. He loved to play the big tournaments but he didn&#8217;t like the whole life of a tennis player. So you have to understand that also. But I think he was a great. He was a nice guy from, I repeat, my side. And he was a helluva tennis player&#8230;The fans and the media never got to him — really close. I think you have to check the background. In Chile, when he was a kid, he had some problems with the media when he was 16. When he stepped up to complain about something about the Federation. So maybe after that he took some distance from the media around the world. With the fans also. Like I said, he was gifted to play tennis. But he was maybe not gifted to do whatever is outside to the inside of the tennis court. Because he loved to practice, sacrifice. He loved to compete. But everything else outside of the tennis — you name it, the fans, the kids — he wasn&#8217;t able to do it. Because of his character, he didn&#8217;t enjoy to do that. He&#8217;s a guy who, I believe, he do things that he enjoy&#8230;We were close. I mean, he was a sensitive guy. Personally, he was a guy that I really liked. I know that not many players like him, but I like him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Luis Lobo, former coach: &#8220;I just have good things to talk about Marcelo. I think he was the most professional player that I&#8217;ve ever seen. I know the people think of him another way, but for me he was a very good professional. He was one of the best players in the world, for sure. For sure he&#8217;s one of the best players in history. For me, yes. Because, about tennis, if he made a Grand Slam or No. 1 for more time, for sure he&#8217;s one of the best guys I ever see. Very talented. If you play against him on a day when he&#8217;s focused, very tough to beat him, very tough. He had so many great matches — Monte Carlo against Kuerten, Paris against Albert Costa, indoors when he make Singapore — so many good matches. (What held him back from winning a Slam?) It&#8217;s a good question, I don&#8217;t know. I&#8217;m not a psychologist [laughs]. He was very close to winning a Grand Slam. He lost the final (in Australian Open to Korda in &#8216;98), and then personal problems. I don&#8217;t know. One part of each player — some players when they&#8217;re this close to the final, they make it. And others, no, they can&#8217;t do it. But I think he was injured a long time too. And the moment for him was a stress fracture in the lower back, and problems with legs&#8230;He was very nice person. Very nice. When he was in a tournament, he would be alone and no say hello to anybody. Just a few guys. He didn&#8217;t believe too much in the people. And I think he was right. Because in tennis, the world is very tough to be friends.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fabrice Santoro: &#8220;I played Marcelo three times. You could say, on the court, he was a great, great player. And one of the greats of the game. He was to serve well and he hit the ball really, really well on both sides. He hit the backhand moving well too. I remember when he won Indian Wells and Key Biscayne in a row, he was playing one of the best tennis I&#8217;ve ever seen&#8230;We played three times, he beat me twice. It was always a good match. Because I like to use the spins and slice on the court and when I was playing against him, it was a very fun match, but it was a very good competition. His talents — one of the best. A lefty Agassi. (What was he missing?) Sometimes a little bit short physically. Because other guys can serve really well. He can play well forehands, backhands, moves pretty well. But five sets for two weeks — too tough for him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Wayne Ferreira: &#8220;He was really good because he took the ball early and he had a lot of feel on the ball. He moved pretty well and he was a good competitor. But he was so good at finding where the ball was going and taking it so early&#8230;I didn&#8217;t really have a problem with him. I actually did pretty well against him. I beat him most of the times that I played against him. I just felt like I could overpower him a lot. He got a lot of balls back and he took it early but, to me, he was a little bit soft at times. He didn&#8217;t hit the ball that hard. I felt like he hit the ball, I could still run down everything. I could overpower him. But he was difficult. He could get a lot of balls back, make you play a lot of balls. I had to be in great shape and I had to be really competitive and concentrate a lot to beat him. (Why did he not win a Slam?) Maybe for that reason. I think he was just a little bit soft. Guys like Pete and Andre — on a regular basis — when it got tight, tough like this, they used to overpower him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Roger Federer: (When asked back in 2000 which was his favorite tennis player to watch): &#8220;I like Rios. I like his game. When he&#8217;s playing well, he&#8217;s fun to watch. Because he&#8217;s a different type of guy.&#8221;</p>
<p>Vera Zvonareva: &#8220;I think Rios was a great tennis player. I watched him play maybe a year and a half ago in Washington. And I think he was a great player to watch for me. I think he was like an actor on the court. And I love it because he was doing his show. Everybody knows it&#8217;s tough to play tennis, especially when it&#8217;s 100 degree. And he was like performing like an actor. You can always see his emotions. He wasn&#8217;t just like standing there doing his job, you could see how he feels.&#8221;</p>
<p>Patrick McEnroe (his ESPN commentary during the first set of the 2002 Nasdaq- 100 semifinals vs. Agassi): &#8220;I&#8217;m not even sure if he goes out there with a strategy, Cliff. He just goes out there and just swings away, angles the ball, it looks like he just sort of free-wheels it out there and relies on his talent. Agassi used to do that. Agassi would just bomb the ball and just says, I&#8217;m just gonna be a shotmaker and I&#8217;m gonna rely on that. But why Agassi has won seven Slams now and Rios has won zero is because Agassi has learned to play his opponents, to play within himself, to come out there focused, to be physically fit, to have a strategy, have a gameplan&#8230;The players are just too good these days, to think you can go out there and just free-wheel it&#8230;That is SCARY right there! That is pure genius right there. What a one-two from Rios. Just launching himself into that backhand, taking it in mid-flight for the clean winner cross court (at 7-7 in the first-set tiebreak &#8211; which Rios won 9-7, but he retired after losing the second set 6-4.).&#8221;</p>
<p>Guillermo Vilas: &#8220;I talked to him a couple of times. He didn&#8217;t talk too much. He had a strong character. It&#8217;s like when you are in front of a lion — you are not going give some candy to a lion, right? Everybody knew he was like that. Some people are like that. If you give him enough space, he&#8217;s okay&#8230;He play well, but he could never win something very big. He had the qualities to do that, then his body gave out. But he left his image to the players — a very good way of playing and the attitude was like a rebel. He was very interesting, to add color to the game. If he wouldn&#8217;t have had all those injuries, he would have been better, much better. The time he was there, he was exciting. But it&#8217;s sad, because the body gave out. He was a great player, but you have to be champion of the world. He was geared to do that, but the body didn&#8217;t allow him to do that. Like it happened to Muster. Muster was gearing to be No. 1. Suddenly he had the accident (hit by car in Miami) and three years after, he did it. Rios didn&#8217;t have that second chance. You can say Rios was one of the most gifted ever. But not one of the best ever. Because you have to win something, you have to do a little bit more. He looked very nice, everything he did. But the body did not allow him to do it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ilie Nastase: &#8220;He&#8217;s the worst prick I ever met. The players of today probably have the same opinion of him. Ask all the players what they think of him, you&#8217;ll get the same thing. When somebody doesn&#8217;t sign autographs for the kids, that is a prick for me. (What about his game?) I don&#8217;t give a shit. I don&#8217;t look at him. For me, he&#8217;s an idiot. I don&#8217;t know what else to tell about him. And that&#8217;s the first time I say something about somebody like that. I think he was the worst thing for tennis. He did not deserve to be No. 1 — one or two days. To live with the other players like he did — terrible. He really was the worst. I never say anything about anybody else like this but about him I have to say this. Sorry.&#8221;</p>
<p>Pat Cash: &#8220;Rios is one of the most talented players I&#8217;ve ever seen. I thought he had a control like a McEnroe. He was definitely a wasted talent but he still got to number one in the world. I loved watching him. He was brilliant. He hit the ball anywhere. Anywhere&#8230;I played doubles with him one week, in Scottsdale in &#8216;95 or &#8216;96. When I was making a comeback. We practiced quite a bit. And when I practiced with him, I never ran so much in my life. I played with a lot of the top guys in practice and he was just able to hit the ball anywhere. He used to run me everywhere. (How did you do in doubles with Rios?) Not very good. It wasn&#8217;t his fault though [smiles]. I was making a bit of a comeback and I was pretty terrible. But he was a brilliant player and I was disappointed that he never actually fulfilled his potential. (Get along well with him?) I got on all right with him. A lot of other guys didn&#8217;t like him, that&#8217;s for sure. Not many guys, I think, got along with him. And he was fine to me. We always had a good time, we practiced hard and I liked his game. And I think he appreciated somebody that was nice to him, I think.&#8221;</p>
<p>Melchior DiGiacomo, noted tennis photographer: &#8220;I think he&#8217;s one of the best players I&#8217;ve ever seen play the game. I&#8217;ve been following tennis since 1971. And I thought Rios was a bit of a throwback in many ways. He reminded me of guys like Ken Rosewall — who had so many great shots. Guys like Tom Okker who was a brilliant player. Rios was that way. But I couldn&#8217;t figure Rios&#8217; head. Because I never knew where he was on the court. Whereas the older players, you always knew where their head was 7#8212; their head was, To win. At all costs. But Rios, I don&#8217;t know. There&#8217;s a wonderful line written by Norman Mailer in a book called &#8216;The Bullfighter.&#8217; He&#8217;s talking about how a man cannot be judged by what he is, the man is best judged at his greatest moment. (Melchior sent the exact quote to me the next day: &#8220;The one thing that can keep the sweet nerve of life alive is the knowledge that a man cannot be judged by what he is every day, but only at his greatest moment, for that is when he shows what he was intended to be..It is a Latin approach, their allegiance is to the genius of blood. So they judge a man by what he is at his best.&#8221;) And that&#8217;s what Rios was to me. There are times when you look at him and you say, Nobody in the world has ever done what he has just done, in terms of the match. And then you may see him the next day or two days later and you go, What happened to that guy that was out here a couple of days ago? Is it the same guy? I don&#8217;t know how you get to a kid like that. Again, he was brilliant. There were other players who were like that — Mel Purcell never had a killer shot. But you had to hit him over the head with a shovel if you wanted to beat him. But Rios&#8217; head was the thing. He had every shot in the game. There was nothing he couldn&#8217;t do. (How was he as a subject to shoot?) Brilliant. Because of his athleticism. He wasn&#8217;t like Adriano Panatta, who was like this stand-up, at-attention Italian. He had a beautiful game but there really wasn&#8217;t anything to shoot, in terms of physical action. Rios is the kind of guy that could stop on a dime and give you five cents change. He was very exciting to shoot. Connors was not very exciting to shoot, in the sense that he played basically a baseline game, rarely came to the net. And the only time Jimmy was exciting was when he pumped up the crowd. Then he was exciting. But photographing Rios during a match was always exciting. And you had to be quick, because he was quick. When guys are running as fast as he is and lunging out making shots, that&#8217;s exciting for me, because he fills the frame. He&#8217;s not standing up straight. But Rios was exciting. And he&#8217;ll be missed. By me. I don&#8217;t know about everybody else.&#8221;</p>
<p>Carl Munnerlyn, U.S. Open locker room supervisor: &#8220;Rios was very giving. When I knew him, when he was a player, he always, after each practice, he would come in and go up to one of the attendants and always offer a pair of his shoes that he just practiced in. And even after the match. His match shoe, that he wore in the match. He&#8217;d always come up to us and give us his shoes. Every time, every day he was here. It was unbelievable how such a giving person he was. Not too many people knew him that way, but we, as locker room attendants, knew him that way — as a very giving, courteous person. And he always joked with us, he liked to joke with us. Because he saw us as people he could relate to. He was relaxed with us. And we brought out his lighter side, his personality, instead of serious all the time, like always getting ready for a match. One time I was standing next to the soda refrigerator and he walked by and gave my head a push. I turned around and Marcelo&#8217;s walking out the door, smiling. So that&#8217;s how I know him. He was friendly to me. In that sense, I know him that way. He was never not the slightest bit sarcastic to me. That&#8217;s what I know of Marcelo Rios. Nice guy.&#8221;</p>
<p>Petr Korda: &#8220;I beat him badly (in 1998 Australian Open final 6-2, 6-2, 6-2). It was very — actually I had the chance to see the match on video for the first time a month and a half ago. And in TV it looked completely different than it did on the court. But I remember I was really dominating and I was ready for that. I knew this was probably my last chance to win a Slam — and if I played the right game, then I could beat him. I think I really shot him down that day. I know we were hitting the balls very hard. On the TV it doesn&#8217;t look like it. I was hitting balls very hard. (What kind of person was Rios?) I think that not many people knew him. Some people had problems with him, he was like a controversial, not many people did like him. But I know him, we play doubles. I don&#8217;t know if it was before or after we played in Australian Open. He was a nice guy. Gifted player. And I said in Australia, he can be maybe number one. But it&#8217;s most important to win the Slam. Unfortunately for him, he never achieved it. Maybe I was that reason, probably.&#8221;</p>
<p>Angelica Gavaldon (Former WTA top 30): &#8220;My mom remembers him carrying my laundry bag in Sydney. I think he is a really sweet person. I really like Marcelo Rios. I know a lot of people had mixed feelings about him but I personally thought he was really shy .The first time I met him was at The US OPEN and my coach at the time, Pato Rodriguez, scheduled a practice session with him, we played baseline games and after he went up to Pato and said, &#8216;Wow, I did not know girls could actually play tennis.&#8217; I thought it was funny. Later on in Australia we where at the same tournaments and I remember him waking up super early almost everyday to practice with me at 6:30 AM. I played okay that year and I think he didn&#8217;t win a match, so I felt guilty that it was probably because I don&#8217;t hit the ball like a guy.&#8221;</p>
<p>Jaime Fillol, former Chilean pro tennis player with six career singles titles, quarterfinalist 1975 U.S. Open: &#8220;I first met him in New York when he was a junior. And he was already playing well in Futures. We became very close. We run an AP event in Chile. We would have to many times negotiate with him, his participation, especially when he was top 10. I think he was a very good player, he had a lot of talent. Not just with his hands, but with his mind. Very good at feeling no pressure and I think that&#8217;s what made him so good. There&#8217;s a lot of people that have talent but when it comes to winning, they have a hard time winning. And he was winning a lot of matches at a young age. Then I think he got hurt too much, too often, he couldn&#8217;t keep it up. There was criticism over his attitude — that he wouldn&#8217;t fight hard enough. But I would say that his personality was not a disciplined mentality. He was very erratic in that respect. He was not a Saxon or a Slavic, he&#8217;s Chilean, he&#8217;s kind of moody. And if he doesn&#8217;t feel good, he just doesn&#8217;t try. Not because he&#8217;s lazy, because he doesn&#8217;t feel good. So I think that was the criticism — which was fair — in order to be a champion and stay there as champion — you have to have the discipline too. Have the discipline, as far as to be a champion.&#8221; Asked for his lasting image of Rios, Fillol replied: &#8220;Playing so well that it was so much fun to watch him play. In fact, he really could make almost anyone look like a beginner. If things were right, he would guess exactly where the ball was coming. He would anticipate. He didn&#8217;t have to be strong physically to make the ball go and to have the guy run from one side to the other. I think his body didn&#8217;t hold the pressure of the circuit. He was weak in his preparation, probably coming from Chile, not knowing exactly what was gonna happen if he was that good. I don&#8217;t think he was prepared physically for the Tour. (Did he ever win the Chile event?) He never won the tournament, that&#8217;s why I didn&#8217;t mention it [smiles]. He got to the finals four times. He would make the crowd very upset because everybody was waiting for him to win the first time. He made the finals four times and lost to guys he should have beat — Slava Dosedel, Hernan Gumy and recently he lost in 2002 to David Sanchez. He was winning 6-1 and 40-love to go up 4-1 and lost the game. And then he couldn&#8217;t play. He became nervous.&#8221; &#8220;He was very — the word in is Spanish, &#8216;contradictorio&#8217; — he would do the unexpected. If you were waiting for him to say hello to you, he&#8217;s not gonna say hello to you. If you didn&#8217;t think he&#8217;d say hello to you, he&#8217;d come up and say hello to you. He treated people like that. Not that he didn&#8217;t care for people, it was just like a game. He made a lot of enemies because of that, but I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s a bad person. I would say he didn&#8217;t have the same discipline you need to have off the court. Many times he would do things — I mean the President of Chile was practically disgraced by him. When he became number one and the President invited him to the Palace and he came in a shirt, looking like he was going to the beach. And the President said, ‘Marcelo would you like to say something to the people?’ ‘No, I don&#8217;t want to say anything.’ So he turned the President of the country off just by being different. He didn&#8217;t think it was a big occasion, but he&#8217;s not a bad person. &#8220;I saw him about two months ago in Santiago, at the gym where he was training. I was talking to his physical trainer. And Marcelo was there, although he is retired, he still goes to the gym every day and trains, so he&#8217;s in good shape, other than the pain that he says he feels when he plays tennis.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>&#8220;A man of genius makes no mistakes. His errors are volitional and are the portals of discovery.&#8221; — James Joyce, Ulysses </em></p>
<p><em>&#8220;We don&#8217;t see things as they are, we see things as we are.&#8221; —  Anais Nin </em></p>
<p><em>&#8220;To be great is to be misunderstood.&#8221; — Ralph Waldo Emerson</em></p>
<p>(Note: This article is currently being developed into an unauthorized biography about Marcelo Rios.)</p>
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		<title>Biofile with Taylor Dent</title>
		<link>http://thebiofile.com/2010/01/biofile-with-taylor-dent/</link>
		<comments>http://thebiofile.com/2010/01/biofile-with-taylor-dent/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:09:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scoop Malinowski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[BioFiles]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thebiofile.com/?p=253</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Status: Currently ranked #81 in ATP rankings. Has won four ATP singles titles. Won 2006 Hopman Cup in Perth Australia for America with partner Lisa Raymond.
Ht: 6-1 1/2  Wt: 200
DOB: Aprill 24, 1981 In: Newport Beach, CA
First Tennis Memory:  &#8220;In tears after losing my first set in the final of a tournament. I was ten. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/P9010832.JPG"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-254" title="P9010832" src="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/P9010832.JPG" alt="P9010832" width="582" height="652" /></a></p>
<p>Status: Currently ranked #81 in ATP rankings. Has won four ATP singles titles. Won 2006 Hopman Cup in Perth Australia for America with partner Lisa Raymond.</p>
<p>Ht: 6-1 1/2  Wt: 200</p>
<p>DOB: Aprill 24, 1981 In: Newport Beach, CA</p>
<p>First Tennis Memory:  &#8220;In tears after losing my first set in the final of a tournament. I was ten. (Against who?) Curtis Elmore. I won the first set 6-2, lost the second set 6-3 and, that age, you get a ten-minute break in between sets and I was in tears. It was the final set. I lost.&#8221;</p>
<p>Tennis Inspiration:  &#8220;Actually what started me was probably Chang. When my dad was coaching Chang, Michael Chang.&#8221;</p>
<p>Last Book Read:  &#8220;Last book I read was The Secret Of The Slight Edge by Bob Mowatt.&#8221;</p>
<p>Current Car:  &#8220;Is a Scion XB (white). I almost killed myself in a Porsche Turbo and I realized that cars and speed and me don&#8217;t mix. So I go for the most efficient, cheapest car I can find.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greatest Sports Moment:  &#8220;It&#8217;s tough to beat winning titles. I&#8217;d say winning Newport  (2002) holds the biggest place in my heart because it&#8217;s my first.&#8221;</p>
<p>Most Painful Moment:  &#8220;Any time you lose is painful. But there&#8217;s one I played Andy Roddick in the second round of the Australian Open. And I just couldn&#8217;t hit a ball in the court. I&#8217;d played on big stages many, many times. I wasn&#8217;t nervous or tight. It was just one of those days. Unfortunately, I have those days where I couldn&#8217;t serve in the court, couldn&#8217;t hit a ball in the court. And he beat me like 2-0-1 or something like that. That was painful.&#8221;</p>
<p>Which Match Do You Feel You Were At Your Best:  &#8220;Probably Andy Roddick. Beat him 1 and 4 in the final of Memphis. I returned unbelievable.&#8221;</p>
<p>Closest Tennis Friends:  &#8220;You know, I&#8217;m pretty solitary but I hand with whoever&#8217;s around. I&#8217;m pretty easy to get along with. Dave Martin is a doubles player, we&#8217;re pretty good buddies. Alex Bogomolov. Any of the American guys really.&#8221;</p>
<p>Funniest Players Encountered:  &#8220;Fish is kind of funny, he&#8217;s more annoying than funny [smiles]. James (Blake) is pretty funny. Everybody&#8217;s got to have a sense of humor out here. So everybody can have a laugh.&#8221;</p>
<p>Funny Tennis Memory:  &#8220;I was playing a doubles match against Ginepri and Merklein and my partner was Alex Bogomolov. We were playing I-formation. Alex just hit a bunny of  a serve in. And I popped up and Ginepri just tried to take my head off. Just kind of smiling as he&#8217;s doing it. I had some gas that day, so I reflexed the volley. And I grunted and as I grunted, a big fart came out. The point continued and everybody on the court&#8217;s laughing. Everybody in the stands is laughing. And after we lost the point &#8211; What are you guy&#8217;s laughing at? But it was obvious. (Where was it?) That was the Houston tournament when it was Mattress Mac&#8217;s place.&#8221;</p>
<p>Toughest Competitors:  &#8220;I mean, the list goes on. Andy Roddick won&#8217;t give you anything. Lleyton Hewitt doesn&#8217;t give you anything. I think the times I played with Nalbandian it&#8217;s been rough. Agassi obviously. You can&#8217;t not be a competitor and be good.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Players To Watch:  &#8220;Can&#8217;t help but to love to watch Federer. I actually really enjoy watching Nalbandian play. (Why him?) Nalbandian just seems like he just doesn&#8217;t miss much, can move the ball around the court where ever he wants to. When he&#8217;s playing well he just makes the other players run so much. So it&#8217;s pretty fun to watch. Davydenko can be fun sometimes too.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Tournament:  &#8220;Outside of the grand slams, because they&#8217;re obviously the big deals, it&#8217;s a very unique atmosphere in Newport. The fans get to be very close to the players, so this is fun. I&#8217;m an American guy so I love the American swing, every single one of them is nice to play at. &#8221;</p>
<p>People Qualities Most Admired:  &#8220;Integrity. A pet peeve of mine is when people are inconsiderate and thoughtless.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Biofile with James Blake</title>
		<link>http://thebiofile.com/2010/01/biofile-with-james-blake/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Jan 2010 23:10:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scoop Malinowski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[BioFiles]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Car Hand]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Good Will Hunting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harvard Team]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Blake]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Yonkers Ny]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thebiofile.com/?p=235</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Status: Former world #4 in ATP rankings. Member of 2007 U.S. Davis Cup-winning team.
Ht: 6-1 Wt: 170
DOB: December 28, 1979 In: Yonkers, NY
Childhood Heroes: &#8220;Michael Jordan impressed me with how he got ready for every game. And he had to show everyone he was the best every time he stepped on that court. In tennis [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_236" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 96px"><a class="highslide" onclick="return vz.expand(this)" href="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/PB290404.JPG"><img class="size-medium wp-image-236" title="PB290404" src="http://thebiofile.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/PB290404-86x300.jpg" alt="James Blake at the Davis Cup final draw in Portland, Oregon in December 2007." width="86" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">James Blake at the Davis Cup final draw in Portland, Oregon in December 2007.</p></div>
<p>Status: Former world #4 in ATP rankings. Member of 2007 U.S. Davis Cup-winning team.</p>
<p>Ht: 6-1 Wt: 170</p>
<p>DOB: December 28, 1979 In: Yonkers, NY</p>
<p>Childhood Heroes: &#8220;Michael Jordan impressed me with how he got ready for every game. And he had to show everyone he was the best every time he stepped on that court. In tennis I liked all the Americans like John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors, Pete, Andre, Jim Courier, Todd Martin. I liked Stefan Edberg too, how he carried himself on the court. My father really liked watching him too.&#8221;</p>
<p>Nicknames: &#8220;Junior. JB. Squirt Gun &#8211; luckily that was short-lived. On the Harvard team, most of the guys had nicknames. One guy gave most of the guys their nicknames. And my brother (Thomas) was Tommy Gun. So the first time I came up for a visit &#8211; I was 5&#8242; 4&#8243;, a little kid &#8211; and so they called me Squirt Gun.&#8221;</p>
<p>Hobbies/Interests: &#8220;Play golf &#8211; I&#8217;m not that good but it&#8217;s a lot of fun. Play some basketball. Poker.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Movies: &#8220;Braveheart, Good Will Hunting.&#8221; Musical Tastes: &#8220;R&amp;B, rap, classic rock, The Doors, Led Zeppelin, Notorious B.I.G, Tupac, Master P, Snoop Doggy Dogg, John Mayer, Brandy, R Kelly.&#8221;</p>
<p>Early Tennis Memory: &#8220;Hmmm, let&#8217;s see. Winning my first New England Open when I was 11, at Brown University in Rhode Island. I was really happy. At the time it seemed so important.&#8221;</p>
<p>Childhood Dream: &#8220;Being at the U.S. Open, Wimbledon or the French Open. Things I dreamed about. I&#8217;d go to the U.S. Open every year as a kid. One or two years I might have even snuck in! First Job: &#8220;Paperboy for the Bridgeport Post (age 10). I did it for five years. That was a lot of fun. My brother and I shared the route.&#8221;</p>
<p>First Car: &#8220;Hand-me-down from my brother, which was already bought used. A 1987 crimson Toyota Celica with dents all over it. The stereo barely worked. Put a sticker on it and called it The Harvard Mobile.&#8221;</p>
<p>Current Car: &#8220;Mercedes.&#8221;</p>
<p>Funny Tennis Memory: &#8220;The first time Thomas and I played doubles together was at the U.S. Open in qualies (&#8216;97). We didn&#8217;t think we were gonna get a wildcard. So we were actually out on the first tee, ready to tee off, in Trumbull, CT. And I didn&#8217;t even think to call down to see if we got a wildcard. And we were playing with my coach and another Harvard teammate. And they said, &#8216;You might as well just call before we go out.&#8217; So I call down and go back and tell them I think we might only get in nine holes because we have to be down in New York in an hour and a half. They thought I was kidding. So we have to run to the car, run home and change into our clothes. We flew down here. We ended up getting down and the match was delayed. We didn&#8217;t even think we were gonna play. We ended up playing a great match, we lost 7-6 in the third to Davide Sanguinetti and another player I forget his name. And it was a lot of fun.&#8221;</p>
<p>Pre-Match Feeling: &#8220;Try to get a gameplan pretty early. Before I go out to a match, I think about how I&#8217;m going to play and think about the feeling of winning it. I always want to think about that feeling. So it&#8217;s never a surprise. I don&#8217;t want to be surprised to win.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Meal: &#8220;Just pizza.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Breakfast Cereal: &#8220;Golden Grahams.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Ice Cream Flavor: &#8220;Double fudge brownie.&#8221;</p>
<p>Greatest Sports Moment: &#8220;Was probably winning the Davis Cup. I was really proud of that because I had always dreamed of being a part of a Davis Cup team. And when you&#8217;re playing for your country it&#8217;s a really different feeling when you know it&#8217;s not just for yourself, your family or your bank account or whatever. It&#8217;s for something more important. And my first Davis Cup match was exciting for me to beat Leander Paes in 2001. Especially a couple of months after 9/11. &#8221;</p>
<p>Most Painful Moment: &#8220;It might&#8217;ve been losing that match in 2001 to Lleyton Hewitt at the U.S. Open. More physically painful because I was throwing up and cramping on the court. And I really felt like that was when I was playing some good tennis and could&#8217;ve maybe gone further when no one really knew much about me at that point. And I was just breaking on to the tennis scene and it would have been nice to have that win.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Athletes To Watch: &#8220;Americans in tennis &#8211; Sampras, Agassi, Roddick, Todd Martin &#8211; he was always kind of a favorite of mine. Randy Moss. Shaq &#8211; incredible. The Mets. Tiger Woods. Roy Jones Jr. Tyson back in the day. Just ran through people. Women&#8217;s tennis? I can&#8217;t say I follow it that much. But maybe I did like watching Steffi Graf. Seemed like a really great person and someone that was going to be nice no matter what happened. A great champion. Another great champion was Patrick Rafter. He&#8217;s a class act, someone I admire a lot. I played him three or four years ago in (3rd round at) Cincinnati (lost 7-6 (9-7), 6-2 after defeating Arnaud Clement and Julien Boutter). After the match, he was telling me, &#8216;You could have beaten me today. You could beat me on any given day. It&#8217;s just that maybe you didn&#8217;t believe you could.&#8217; For him to say that to me&#8230;he didn&#8217;t need to. He could have just said he played horribly. He was worrying about playing the rest of the tournament, he had a million friends in the locker room, not like he needed one more. He was just helping out a kid that was struggling with his confidence. He really helped me a lot that day. Until then I didn&#8217;t feel that I belonged on the ATP Tour at all. After that, I started thinking, Maybe he&#8217;s right, maybe I do belong out here. Now I realize I can play with those guys. Patrick really made a difference in my career.&#8221;</p>
<p>Embarrassing Tennis Memory: &#8220;Was probably that same match with Lleyton, when I threw up in front of 10,000 people in Louie Armstrong (stadium). And then had my friends from college send me the links to where it was on the internet, the picture of me throwing up on the court, so [smiles]. That was probably my most embarrassing time.&#8221;</p>
<p>Closest Tennis Friends: &#8220;Mardy Fish is probably my best friend on the tour, he lives right around the corner from me. Then Robby (Ginepri) and Andy (Roddick) and the Bryan twins are all real good friends too.&#8221;</p>
<p>Funniest Players: &#8220;Mardy. He&#8217;s a riot. He keeps me laughing all the time.&#8221;</p>
<p>Toughest Competitor: &#8220;I&#8217;d say probably Andy Roddick is on my list of toughest competitors. Because he&#8217;s a guy that has a huge serve. And a lot of guys like that kinda take it easy if they&#8217;re holding (serve) easy. He never gives you free points. He works hard for everything. Never gives up. He&#8217;s an unbelievable competitor.&#8221;</p>
<p>Favorite Tournament: &#8220;U.S. Open is definitely my favorite. Being so close to home where I grew up. I&#8217;ve been a fan of this tournament since I can remember. Playing in the Pilot Pen (New Haven) is fun just because I get to stay home, it&#8217;s really exciting to have so many friends and family there too. And otherwise, foreign tournaments &#8211; I&#8217;d say the Australian Open. Because the fans are great. The people there, the beaches are nice, everything about that place is pretty fun. And we stay in a casino so that helps too [smiles].&#8221;</p>
<p>People Qualities Most Admired: &#8220;Honesty. Someone who&#8217;s gonna be with you from beginning to end no matter what happens. Someone you can always count on.&#8221;</p>
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