There is no way forward without ending the occupation.
I still break racquets, but now I do it in a positive way.
The trouble with me is that every match I play against five opponents: umpire, crowd, ball boys, court, and myself.
I don't care now if I ever win a match in my life again. Whatever I do in my life, wherever I go, I'm going to be always Wimbledon champion.
When you are winning too much, sometimes you think you should never lose again. I am learning to lose.
When I won Wimbledon, I said to God: just let me win this one tournament and I won't play another match. Maybe God's telling me to go home, but I don't want to go home. We are negotiating at the moment.
I just try to play tennis and don't find excuses. You know, I just lost because I lost, not because my arm was sore.
I do not see myself as a footnote to someone else's life.
Cap and trade is a sledge hammer to freedom.
Art. Its definitions are legion, its meanings multitudinous, its importance often debated. But amid the many contradictory definitions of art, one has always stood the test of time, from the Upanishads in the East, to Michelangelo in the West: art is the perception and depiction of the sublime, the transcendent, the beautiful, the spiritual.
I'm a very private person. Very private. You know, I've lived my entire life in a fishbowl, so it was important for me to keep my personal life private because people can't talk about what they don't know.