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June 29, 2008
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Sunday
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Jamadi-us-Sani 24, 1429
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Loss to intensify my determination, says Sharapova
LONDON, June 28: Maria Sharapova insists the humiliation of being dumped out of Wimbledon by fellow Russian Alla Kudryavtseva has only fuelled her determination to win the tournament again.
Sharapova, the third seed, suffered her earliest exit from the grasscourt Grand Slam after a lacklustre second-round display against the world number 154 on Court One.
Coming so soon after a fourth round exit to Dinara Safina at the French Open, this 6-2, 6-4 defeat was an hour and 23 minutes of agony for Sharapova.
It was one of Wimbledon’s greatest shocks and continued a worrying decline for Sharapova just six months after winning the Australian Open.
Her anger would hardly have been eased when Kudryavtseva later laid bare the frosty relationship between the richest sportswoman in the world and the majority of the other Russian players. But the world number three, who triumphed at Wimbledon in 2004, is adamant she is determined to be the women’s champion at the All England Club again.
“I still have the desire, even 30 minutes after the match, to go back on court and to get better, because that’s the only thing that’s gonna get me to hold that plate again,” she said.
“I still have many years ahead of me. I’ve had to deal with a lot of ups and a lot of downs on and off the court, and I have the experience behind me. I think the number one thing is not be discouraged by losses or by negative things.
“You have to find a way to keep your head up even though it’s pretty tough, because you put the effort in and you work hard and you dedicate yourself every single day to be a better player and a better professional,” she added.
“Sometimes the work doesn’t pay off until you never know when. I don’t know when that work’s gonna pay off.
“I’ve come into a tournament and results don’t just come. It’s not just for me. It’s for everybody. Everybody goes through it and has those moments.
“But I’m experienced enough to know that life goes on and that there are a lot worse things in life that can happen than losing a tennis match, even if it’s at Wimbledon and even if it means a lot to me,” Sharapova stated.
—AFP
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