Was ist los mit Marat Safin???

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  • Novak Djokovic
    Veteran
    • 05.07.2006
    • 1521

    Was ist los mit Marat Safin???

    Ich hab mir mal überlegt einen kleinen Fred über einen wie ich finde sehr sympathischen, talentierten und homorvollen Tennisspieler zu machen. Marat Safin...sicher, die guten,alten Tage von Marat sind längst vergangen aber wieso?
    In seinen Interviews sagt er immer, er würde hart trainieren aber irgendwie läuft es seit 2-3 Jahren nicht mehr bei ihm...auch wechselte er vielfach seine Coaches und versuchte sich vom Tennis abzulenken aber trotzdem will der richtige Erfolg nicht kommen...hoffentlich hat ihm der Sieg im Doppel beim Kremlin Cup in Moskau mit Turnunov wieder ertwas Selbstvertrauen gegeben und er wird in Paris und Madrid mal wieder etwas reißen können. Allerdings sehe ich mit dem Los in Madrid schon mal schwarz...Ivo Karlovic in der ersten Runde, danach dann Nikolay Davydenko...es wär schon ein Erfolg, wenn er Karlovic schlagen würde!

    Hier habe ich dann noch mal ein recht interessantes, aktuelles Interview mit ihm gefunden...doch verstehen tut man ihn dadurch auch net besser...

    Marat Safin, ‘I’m searching. Constantly.’



    Marat Safin is a unique person. Even though he lost his high rankings because of a serious injury, the former world number one is still interesting and intriguing for the fans, spectators and tournament management. And at the Kremlin Cup in Moscow this week he is, no doubt, the major star. Safin hates routine and he’s always sincere – sincere in his actions, behaviour, thoughts and words. That’s what Maria Kuznetsova from “Izvestia” had the chance to make sure of.



    ‘When people have nothing to say, they come up with meddlesome advice’



    Q: Let’s start with an unusual question. What were your thinking about when you woke up today?



    MS: I guess, I didn’t think about anything at all, because it all goes automatically – practicing, playing. Waking up automatically, then shower, and then a ride to the courts. Boring… (frowning)



    Q: Do you make plans then?



    MS: I never do, just because they never come true. Especially in here, during the tournament. Every minute of the day is fixed till the very evening. The only thing I can make plans about is where I’m going to have dinner.



    Q: It’s annoying, isn’t it?



    MS: Not that much, I just don’t like it. I want something new and exciting.



    Q: What’s annoying then? What is the thing that gets on your nerves?



    MS: It drives me mad, when some people say “Marat, you’re a talented player, but you should practice more. Usually people, who say something like that, know nothing or very little and have no relation to tennis. They have nothing more to say, so they come up with such advice.



    Q: And your new coach, Hernán Gumy from Argentina? He comes up with no advice?



    MS: You see any career has certain stages – the beginning, the middle and the end. When you’re just starting you should practice more, work on some elements, improve some of them... When you’re 25 it’s hard to change anything. I’m already a mature player, and I need a coach who can understand this. He can force me to do one thing, but at the same time he should let some other things go their own way.



    Q: That’s what Gumy is like?



    MS: He’s very calm. The point for him is to be this calm while he’s on court and not to make a fuss. Otherwise, you know, I might blow my top off.



    Q: Blow your top off? Like doing what?



    MS: Well, I might break my racket, or just tell everyone to… Well, you know how our Russian people swear. I bet you’ve heard workers at a construction site?



    Q: I have. What else annoys you?



    MS: Phone calls. If someone is calling, they want something from you. I don’t like answering, and when I don’t people get offended and angry, ask why I haven’t called them back, what’s up. That’s what annoys me the most.



    Q: And your friends? Who are they?



    MS: Good question… Almost all of them have some business. But there are also artists. Different people who have been living a long life and who have great experience.



    Q: And who is Shamil Tarpischev for you?



    MS: Tarpischev? Shama… A genius coach and a man who easily finds a way out of any situation. He reads people perfectly, gets his ideas straight and has enormous experience. He sees people through – he just needs to talk to them for two minutes. I have a great respect for him.



    ‘I recall my past so as not to walk on air too much’



    Q: Comparing your old interviews and the more recent ones, it’s easy to see how much calmer and wiser you’ve become. Do you think much about yourself?



    MS: Depends on what you mean by it. Yes, I think about myself, but not in a narcissistic way. (laughing) You see, it’s important not to get too obsessed with yourself and only yourself. But at the same time you should love yourself. If you can’t love yourself, how can you love anyone else? And people, who are close to us, also need our attention badly.



    Q: What do you think about your life then?



    MS: We all try to foresee what we’ll be doing in 5 years. And we set some goals for ourselves, because it’s very difficult to live without any. First a person aims at entering the university, than take a second degree. Then giving everything to work, to climb the career ladder. Thirdly he is just stuck in traffic jams every day. And then, at 50, he is hit by the realization, that he hasn’t actually done anything with his life. He was fussing, running around, but what for…



    Q: And you yourself?



    MS: I’m searching. Constantly.



    Q: You sound like a philosopher or like a priest.



    MS: Nope, I don’t read the Bible.



    Q: And what are you reading?



    MS: The most recent one was “A Hundred Years of Solitude” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.



    Q: Never thought that you might like books of this kind.



    MS: And what’s wrong about it? It’s kind of boring to read only classics all the time, I just need something different. So you go for the contemporary literature or something philosophical.



    Q: What do you consider wealth?



    MS: The years I’ve lived. I don’t need too much money, a house in Rublevka (the street in Moscow, where most of the rich and the famous live) or a villa in the French Riviera. Wealth for me is not all these material things, it’s a life experience.



    Q: You once said in an interview, ‘I’m lucky, because I’ve got out of poverty’.



    MS: That’s not true, I’ve never put it that way. I’ve grown up at VDNH, which is quite a nice district of Moscow. Just the whole situation my family was in was not that great. The four of us were living in the flat of 20 square meters. I know that lots of people had worse conditions, but still. The point is that then I hadn’t had the actual chance of achieving anything serious in tennis. That’s why I’m saying – I’m lucky. A man appeared who gave money for me to go to Spain. It was a big amount of money – $ 300 000. You could imagine what $300 000 meant in 1994, couldn’t you? That was an inconceivable sum of money. So I’m still very grateful to that sponsor.



    Q: Do you often go over the past? And what for?



    MS: I do sometimes... And what for? In order not to loose the feeling of reality. You start to walk above the clouds, and then there it comes – a recollection from childhood, which immediately brings you back to the ground. For instance I go into the supermarket, where the shelves are full of different yummy things, and recall standing in line to buy some sugar. That’s exactly the moment, you know, when you start appreciating your life of today.



    Q: Have these recollections become an extra stimulus for achieving some success?



    MS: Of course. Otherwise, who would I have been if I hadn’t got into the tennis elite? Ok, a coach who gets $15 per hour. That might be enough for living, but hardly enough for a family and definitely not enough for buying a flat and a car. And then what? I don’t like this hopeless kind of life.



    ‘I wear pants that cost me $20’



    Q: You’re thought to be one of the most eligible bachelors of the country. How do you choose girls?



    MS: Just the same way you choose us. I look at the face and a bit lower.



    Q: What do you value in women?



    MS: Personality. Character is not a small thing either.



    Q: How do you feel about marriage?



    MS: I’m positive about it. But only after the children are born. After having been living with someone for 15 years you understand if you really love him or her.



    Q: Not earlier? What happens before then?



    MS: Love at the very beginning is an illness, a wild and feverous one. Then it transforms into respect, without which two people just can’t live together for long. Or either it does not transform, and to understand this you need time.



    Q: Are you fashion-conscious?



    MS: Not really. I don’t wear Versace; I don’t have Dolce&Gabbana or Cavalli jeans. I’m not trying to buy things of the latest fashion – I just don’t need that. I’m not trying to prove anything to anyone. There’s no one to prove anything to, and what for, after all?



    Q: But you like to dress up smartly and nicely?



    MS: Just have a look. Now I’m wearing jeans that I’ve bought for $20 on sale in the States, white socks that definitely don’t fit the image, shoes that are probably older than myself and a torn T-shirt.



    Q: And what about Rolex on your wrist?



    MS: (laughing) Ah, this… It’s for free. I’m promoting it.



    Q: But you won’t deny your passion for good cars?



    MS: No (smiling) I like to be comfortable sitting.



    Q: What do you prefer?



    MS: I’ve got two right now – Mercedes and Porsche. The first I got as a present, the second – I bought myself.



    Q: Well, rather expensive ones…



    MS: I’ve told you. One is a present. The second I bought with a huge discount - about 50%, it was sold to me by a friend of mine. You should have rich friends with good cars. (laughing) As Ostap Bender said (the hero of one of the Russian books – The 12 chairs”, and “The Golden Calf”) – a car is not a sign of luxury, but a means of transport.
    Fav. Players: Marat Safin, Andy Roddick, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, Igor Andreev, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
  • moya fan
    Moderator
    • 15.04.2004
    • 14251

    #2
    Nun, er war ja nach seinem Australien Open Triumph im jahre 2005 immer wieder von diversen Verletzungen heimgesucht worden, was sicher eine Rolle spielt. Einige junge Spieler sind neu hinzugekommen, das Tennis stagniert nicht und Safin hatte sicher irgendwo ab einem gewissen Zeitpunkt dann auch Probleme mit der Motivation. Das Tennis spielen wird er ja wohl kaum verlernt haben. Die Niederlagen, die dann folgten haben gewiß auch nicht zur Steigerung seiens Selbstbewußtseins beigetragen. Und er scheint ja echt beinahe untrainierbar zu sein. Ich befürchte, daß er sich bald zurückziehen wird.
    Faves Players:Pouille, Simon,Verdasco,Murray,Ferrer,Nishikori,Zverev,Fognini.
    Wenn du dir ein Ziel gesteckt hast, verfolge es mit aller Konsequenz und Beharrlichkeit und lasse dich nicht von eventuellen Rückschritten irritieren.

    Kommentar

    • D-Generated

      #3
      Also ich muss das Element seiner Knieverletzung aus dem Jahre 2005 hier nochmal betonen. Ich selbst laboriere seit einiger Zeit an einem Runner's Knee (Marat hatte ein Jumper's Knee, is aber ähnlich) und mache gerade die selbe Erfahrung wie er (ok, mein Spiel ist vielleicht nicht ganz so gut, aber die Auswirkung sind absolut vergleichbar): Wenn du kein Vertrauen mehr in dein Knie hast und dennoch weiter spielst wirst du beginnen dein ganzes Spiel zu verändern um hohe Belastungen zu vermeiden. Man steht automatische zwei Meter weiter hinter der Grundlinie nur um mehr Zeit zu haben und nicht so hastig zu den Bällen hinlaufen zu müssen um das Knie nicht so zu belasten. Das hört sich jetzt banal an, aber der Schaden am Spiel den so eine Knieverletzung anrichten kann, ist größer als ich bis vor einiger Zeit dachte und wohl auch größer als die meisten, die sowas nicht erfahren, sich vorstellen können.

      Ich habe einen Kommentator bei Eurosport während der Australian Open sagen hören, dass nachdem Marat mit Roger Federer trainiert habe, letzter gesagt habe, dass Marat aktuell besser sei als zum Zeitpunkt des Halbfinales 2005. Wie das ausging wissen wir ja. Mal unterstellt, dass Roger das wirklich gesagt hat, wundert es mich nicht, denn in einer Belastungssituation mit einem Körper zu spielen, dem man nicht vertraut ist echter Müll. Da bekommt man kein Bein auf den Boden...

      Kommentar

      • Novak Djokovic
        Veteran
        • 05.07.2006
        • 1521

        #4
        Uiui...unser Marat:



        Fav. Players: Marat Safin, Andy Roddick, Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, Igor Andreev, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

        Kommentar

        • shaze
          Benutzer
          • 02.06.2007
          • 67

          #5
          mhmhmm... ich hab jetzt nicht wirklich verstanden was da los war...

          Kommentar

          • kunstkopfindianer
            Postmaster
            • 04.10.2006
            • 258

            #6
            Zitat von shaze
            mhmhmm... ich hab jetzt nicht wirklich verstanden was da los war...
            Spieler (Safin) schlägt Ball ins Out und wirft Schläger in Plane.

            Kommentar

            • lemmie

              #7
              Was ist los mit Marat Safin ?
              Nun, dieses Jahr nicht mehr viel... :

              Safin Ends Season, Will Skip Davis Cup Final Against U.S.

              by Sean Randall Turns out Marat Safin and I do have something in common: Neither one of us will be in attendance in Portland when the US meets Russia in the upcoming Davis cup finale. For me, visiting Portland in December is just not my cup of tea. For Safin, he says the Davis cup final is not in his future plans after spending the early part of this month traversing one of the largest mountains in the world.
              In a statement on his official website, maratsafin.com, reads, “Marat was not very happy with his standard of play at the Madrid Masters and has decided after discussion with his coach Hernan Gumy and his management that it would be better to finish his 2007 season now. His mountain adventure which he thoroughly enjoyed, took him out of his rhythm and also left him with no energy. He thought he was ready coming back in Moscow but found that the stress of playing back to back tournaments was too much and his body just was not ready to cope with it. He thought he could play at a good level but it didn’t happen.”
              Safin’s absence will be a big loss not just for the Russian team, but also for tennis fans in this country. I’m a big Safin guy, and I know I’m not the only one here in the US that supports the big Russian. I mean how can you not like the guy? He speaks his mind, he breaks rackets, he wins a Slam every now and then, he pulls his pants down, he likes to throw down a few vodkas, he climbs mountains, and of course he likes to roll a with some pretty fine looking women. He is one of the true characters in tennis today. I would imagine that if you polled fans on which player they’d most like to have a drink at the bar with, Safin’s going to be that guy.
              And the Marat’s done just about everything there is to do in the sport, but sure you could argue that for all his accomplishment and talent he has underachieved. For a variety of reasons, perhaps due to injury or malaise, Safin has not won a title on the ATP circuit since his incredible 2005 Australian Open title run, and his two career Slam wins might not meet the expectations initially set for him after his US Open win. But I think to some extent Safin may be a victim of his own interests.
              For guys like Pete Sampras, Roger Federer, Ivan Lendl and others, getting to the top of the tennis world only drove them harder to stay on top. They liked the grind of being No. 1. On the other hand, I think when Safin got to the top he actually took a look around and smelled the roses. He enjoyed what it offered him. And I think he just knew to maintain that position would take away from his other interests in life – like getting to the top of a mountain! Obviously injuries set him back otherwise he’d surely have some more hardware in his trophy case. But if he had truly committed to tennis 100% who knows…
              Another player like Safin who I think suffers from general tennis disinterest at times is David Nalbandian, who today absolutely destroyed World No. 2 Rafael Nadal at the Tennis Masters in Madrid. Nalbandian, who’s been MIA for most of the year, lost just three games in the match in his first meeting against Rafa. Nalbandian is a great player, an incredible talent, but dropping that kind of scoreline on Rafa in his backyard tells me Nadal had to be under some sort of physical distress. But credit to David for taking care of business.
              With Nadal out, Roger Federer has a pretty clear a path to the Madrid title, with Feliciano Lopez today and then either Fernando Gonzalez or Nick Kiefer in the semi’s. If Novak Djokovic can stay healthy and beat Nalbandian in the semifinals tomorrow it would set up a tasty rematch against Fed on Sunday.
              Back to the Russia-US Davis cup tie. With Safin now out of the lineup (for the moment at least) it will be interesting to see who Russia selects on their team. I think it’s pretty clear that Dmitry Tursunov will be on the squad but who’ll also be selected to play singles is the question. Obviously Nikolay Davydenko is the top ranked Russian, but the Nickel has never beaten either Andy Roddick and James Blake. That said, Russia could select Ivor Andreev who’s proven himself against Roddick and Blake or even Mikhail Youzhny. My early guess is that they will go with Andreev and hope for the best.


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