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Open An Autobiography — tài liệu 398 trang từ thư viện sách tennis.

Chủ đề chính: Power

Tóm tắt nội dung (trích từ tài liệu gốc): For Stefanie, Jaden, and Jaz One cannot always tell what it is that keeps us shut in, confines us, seems to bury us, but still one feels certain barriers, certain gates, certain walls. Is all this imagination, fantasy? I do not think so. And then one asks: My God! Is it for long, is it for ever, is it for eternity? Do you know what frees one from this captivity? It is very deep serious affection. Being friends, being brothers, love, that is what opens the prison by supreme power, by some magic force. --Vincent van Gogh, letter to his brother, July 1880 THE END I OPEN MY EYES and don't know whe

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Nội Dung Gốc (Tiếng Anh)

For Stefanie, Jaden, and Jaz

One cannot always tell what it is that keeps us shut in, confines us, seems to bury us, but still one

feels certain barriers, certain gates, certain walls. Is all this imagination, fantasy? I do not think so.

And then one asks: My God! Is it for long, is it for ever, is it for eternity? Do you know what frees one

from this captivity? It is very deep serious affection. Being friends, being brothers, love, that is what

opens the prison by supreme power, by some magic force.



                              --Vincent van Gogh, letter to his brother, July 1880

                                          THE END



I OPEN MY EYES and don't know where I am or who I am. Not all that unusual--I've

spent half my life not knowing. Still, this feels different. This confusion is more

frightening. More total.



   I look up. I'm lying on the floor beside the bed. I remember now. I moved

from the bed to the floor in the middle of the night. I do that most nights. Better

for my back. Too many hours on a soft mattress causes agony. I count to three,

then start the long, difficult process of standing. With a cough, a groan, I roll

onto my side, then curl into the fetal position, then flip over onto my stomach.

Now I wait, and wait, for the blood to start pumping.



   I'm a young man, relatively speaking. Thirty-six. But I wake as if ninety-six.

After three decades of sprinting, stopping on a dime, jumping high and landing

hard, my body no longer feels like my body, especially in the morning.

Consequently my mind doesn't feel like my mind. Upon opening my eyes I'm a

stranger to myself, and while, again, this isn't new, in the mornings it's more

pronounced. I run quickly through the basic facts. My name is Andre Agassi. My

wife's name is Stefanie Graf. We have two children, a son and daughter, five and

three. We live in Las Vegas, Nevada, but currently reside in a suite at the Four

Seasons hotel in New York City, because I'm playing in the 2006 U.S. Open. My

last U.S. Open. In fact my last tournament ever. I play tennis for a living, even

though I hate tennis, hate it with a dark and secret passion, and always have.



   As this last piece of identity falls into place, I slide to my knees and in a

whisper I say: Please let this be over.



   Then: I'm not ready for it to be over.



   Now, from the next room, I hear Stefanie and the children. They're eating

breakfast, talking, laughing. My overwhelming desire to see and touch them,

plus a powerful craving for caffeine, gives me the inspiration I need to hoist

myself up, to go vertical. Hate brings me to my knees, love gets me on my feet.



   I glance at the bedside clock. Seven thirty. Stefanie let me sleep in. The

fatigue of these final days has been severe. Apart from the physical strain, there

is the exhausting torrent of emotions set loose by my pending retirement. Now,

rising from the center of the fatigue comes the first wave of pain. I grab my

back. It grabs me. I feel as if someone snuck in during the night and attached one

of those anti-theft steering wheel locks to my spine. How can I play in the U.S.

Open with the Club on my spine? Will the last match of my career be a forfeit?



   I was born with spondylolisthesis, meaning a bottom vertebra that parted from

the other vertebrae, struck out on its own, rebelled. (It's the main reason for my

pigeon-toed walk.) With this one vertebra out of sync, there's less room for the

nerves inside the column of my spine, and with the slightest movement the

nerves feel that much more crowded. Throw in two herniated discs and a bone

that won't stop growing in a futile effort to protect the damaged area, and those

nerves start to feel downright claustrophobic. When the nerves protest their

cramped quarters, when they send out distress signals, a pain runs up and down

my leg that makes me suck in my breath and speak in tongues. At such moments

the only relief is to lie down and wait. Sometimes, however, the moment arrives

in the middle of a match. Then the only remedy is to alter my game--swing

differently, run differently, do everything differently. That's when my muscles

spasm. Everyone avoids change; muscles can't abide it. Told to change, my

muscles join the spinal rebellion, and soon my whole body is at war with itself.



   Gil, my trainer, my friend, my surrogate father, explains it this way: Your

body is saying it doesn't want to do this anymore.



   My body has been saying that for a long time, I tell Gil. Almost as long as

I've been saying it.



   Since January, however, my body has been shouting it. My body doesn't want

to retire--my body has already retired. My body has moved to Florida and

bought a condo and white Sansabelts. So I've been negotiating with my body,

asking it to come out of retirement for a few hours here, a few hours there. Much

of this negotiation revolves around a cortisone shot that temporarily dulls the

pain. Before the shot works, however, it causes its own torments.



   I got one yesterday, so I could play tonight. It was the third shot this year, the

thirteenth of my career, and by far the most alarming. The doctor, not my regular

doctor, told me brusquely to assume the position. I stretched out on his table,

face down, and his nurse yanked down my shorts. The doctor said he needed to

get his seven-inch needle as close to the inflamed nerves as possible. But he

couldn't enter directly, because my herniated discs and bone spur were blocking

the path. His attempts to circumvent them, to break the Club, sent me through

the roof. First he inserted the needle. Then he positioned a big machine over my

back to see how close the needle was to the nerves. He needed to get that needle

almost flush against the nerves, he said, without actually touching. If it were to

touch the nerves, even if it were to only nick the nerves, the pain would ruin me

for the tournament. It could also be life-changing. In and out and around, he

maneuvered the needle, until my eyes filled with water.

   Finally he hit the spot. Bull's-eye, he said.

   In went the cortisone. The burning sensation made me bite my lip. Then came



the pressure. I felt infused, embalmed. The tiny space in my spine where the

nerves are housed began to feel vacuum packed. The pressure built until I

thought my back would burst.



   Pressure is how you know everything's working, the doctor said.

   Words to live by, Doc.

   Soon the pain felt wonderful, almost sweet, because it was the kind that you

can tell precedes relief. But maybe all pain is like that.



M . Y FAMILY IS GROWING LOUDER I limp out to the living room of our suite. My son, Jaden, and

my daughter, Jaz, see me and scream. Daddy, Daddy! They jump up and down

and want to leap on me. I stop and brace myself, stand before them like a mime

imitating a tree in winter. They stop just before leaping, because they know

Daddy is delicate these days, Daddy will shatter if they touch him too hard. I pat

their faces and kiss their cheeks and join them at the breakfast table.



   Jaden asks if today is the day.

   Yes.

   You're playing?

   Yes.

   And then after today are you retire?

   A new word he and his younger sister have learned. Retired. When they say it,

they always leave off the last letter. For them it's retire, forever ongoing,

permanently in the present tense. Maybe they know something I don't.

   Not if I win, son. If I win tonight, I keep playing.

   But if you lose--we can have a dog?

   To the children, retire equals puppy. Stefanie and I have promised them that

when I stop training, when we stop traveling the world, we can buy a puppy.

Maybe we'll name him Cortisone.

   Yes, buddy, when I lose, we will buy a dog.

   He smiles. He hopes Daddy loses, hopes Daddy experiences the

disappointment that surpasses all others. He doesn't understand--and how will I

ever be able to explain it to him?--the pain of losing, the pain of playing. It's

taken me nearly thirty years to understand it myself, to solve the calculus of my

own psyche.



   I ask Jaden what he's doing today.



   Going to see the bones.



   I look at Stefanie. She reminds me she's taking them to the Museum of

Natural History. Dinosaurs. I think of my twisted vertebrae. I think of my

skeleton on display at the museum with all the other dinosaurs. Tennis-aurus

Rex.



   Jaz interrupts my thoughts. She hands me her muffin. She needs me to pick

out the blueberries before she eats it. Our morning ritual. Each blueberry must be

surgically removed, which requires precision, concentration. Stick the knife in,

move it around, get it right up to the blueberry without touching. I focus on her

muffin and it's a relief to think about something other than tennis. But as I hand

her the muffin, I can't pretend that it doesn't feel like a tennis ball, which makes

the muscles in my back twitch with anticipation. The time is drawing near.



A , FTER BREAKFAST after Stefanie and the kids have kissed me goodbye and run off to the

museum, I sit quietly at the table, looking around the suite. It's like every hotel

suite I've ever had, only more so. Clean, chic, comfortable--it's the Four

Seasons, so it's lovely, but it's still just another version of what I call Not Home.

The non-place we exist as athletes. I close my eyes, try to think about tonight,

but my mind drifts backward. My mind these days has a natural backspin. Given

half a chance it wants to return to the beginning, because I'm so close to the end.

But I can't let it. Not yet. I can't afford to dwell too long on the past. I get up and

walk around the table, test my balance. When I feel fairly steady I walk gingerly

to the shower.



   Under the hot water I groan and scream. I bend slowly, touch my quads, start

to come alive. My muscles loosen. My skin sings. My pores fly open. Warm

blood goes sluicing through my veins. I feel something begin to stir. Life. Hope.

The last drops of youth. Still, I make no sudden movements. I don't want to do

anything to startle my spine. I let my spine sleep in.



   Standing at the bathroom mirror, toweling off, I stare at my face. Red eyes,

gray stubble--a face totally different from the one with which I started. But also

different from the one I saw last year in this same mirror. Whoever I might be,

I'm not the boy who started this odyssey, and I'm not even the man who

announced three months ago that the odyssey was coming to an end. I'm like a

tennis racket on which I've replaced the grip four times and the strings seven

times--is it accurate to call it the same racket? Somewhere in those eyes,

however, I can still vaguely see the boy who didn't want to play tennis in the

first place, the boy who wanted to quit, the boy who did quit many times. I see

that golden-haired boy who hated tennis, and I wonder how he would view this

bald man, who still hates tennis and yet still plays. Would he be shocked?

Amused? Proud? The question makes me weary, lethargic, and it's only noon.



   Please let this be over.



   I'm not ready for it to be over.



   The finish line at the end of a career is no different from the finish line at the

end of a match. The objective is to get within reach of that finish line, because

then it gives off a magnetic force. When you're close, you can feel that force

pulling you, and you can use that force to get across. But just before you come

within range, or just after, you feel another force, equally strong, pushing you

away. It's inexplicable, mystical, these twin forces, these contradictory energies,

but they both exist. I know, because I've spent much of my life seeking the one,

fighting the other, and sometimes I've been stuck, suspended, bounced like a

tennis ball between the two.



   Tonight: I remind myself that it will require iron discipline to cope with these

forces, and whatever else comes my way. Back pain, bad shots, foul weather,

self-loathing. It's a form of worry, this reminder, but also a meditation. One thing

I've learned in twenty-nine years of playing tennis: Life will throw everything

but the kitchen sink in your path, and then it will throw the kitchen sink. It's your

job to avoid the obstacles. If you let them stop you or distract you, you're not

doing your job, and failing to do your job will cause regrets that paralyze you

more than a bad back.



   I lie on the bed with a glass of water and read. When my eyes get tired I click

on the TV. Tonight, Round Two of the U.S. Open! Will this be Andre Agassi's

farewell? My face flashes on the screen. A different face than the one in the

mirror. My game face. I study this new reflection of me in the distorted mirror

that is TV and my anxiety rises another click or two. Was that the final

commercial? The final time CBS will ever promote one of my matches?



   I can't escape the feeling that I'm about to die.



   It's no accident, I think, that tennis uses the language of life. Advantage,

service, fault, break, love, the basic elements of tennis are those of everyday

existence, because every match is a life in miniature. Even the structure of

tennis, the way the pieces fit inside one another like Russian nesting dolls,

mimics the structure of our days. Points become games become sets become

tournaments, and it's all so tightly connected that any point can become the

turning point. It reminds me of the way seconds become minutes become hours,

and any hour can be our finest. Or darkest. It's our choice.



   But if tennis is life, then what follows tennis must be the unknowable void.

The thought makes me cold.



   Stefanie bursts through the door with the kids. They flop on the bed, and my

son asks how I'm feeling.



   Fine, fine. How were the bones?



   Fun!



   Stefanie gives them sandwiches and juice and hustles them out the door again.



   They have a playdate, she says.



   Don't we all.



   Now I can take a nap. At thirty-six, the only way I can play a late match,

which could go past midnight, is if I get a nap beforehand. Also, now that I

know roughly who I am, I want to close my eyes and hide from it. When I open

my eyes, one hour has passed. I say aloud, It's time. No more hiding. I step into

the shower again, but this shower is different from the morning shower. The

afternoon shower is always longer--twenty-two minutes, give or take--and it's

not for waking up or getting clean. The afternoon shower is for encouraging

myself, coaching myself.



   Tennis is the sport in which you talk to yourself. No athletes talk to

themselves like tennis players. Pitchers, golfers, goalkeepers, they mutter to

themselves, of course, but tennis players talk to themselves--and answer. In the

heat of a match, tennis players look like lunatics in a public square, ranting and

swearing and conducting Lincoln-Douglas debates with their alter egos. Why?

Because tennis is so damned lonely. Only boxers can understand the loneliness

of tennis players--and yet boxers have their corner men and managers. Even a

boxer's opponent provides a kind of companionship, someone he can grapple

with and grunt at. In tennis you stand face-to-face with the enemy, trade blows

with him, but never touch him or talk to him, or anyone else. The rules forbid a

tennis player from even talking to his coach while on the court. People

sometimes mention the track-and-field runner as a comparably lonely figure, but

I have to laugh. At least the runner can feel and smell his opponents. They're

inches away. In tennis you're on an island. Of all the games men and women

play, tennis is the closest to solitary confinement, which inevitably leads to self-

talk, and for me the self-talk starts here in the afternoon shower. This is when I

begin to say things to myself, crazy things, over and over, until I believe them.

For instance, that a quasi-cripple can compete at the U.S. Open. That a thirty-

six-year-old man can beat an opponent just entering his prime. I've won 869

matches in my career, fifth on the all-time list, and many were won during the

afternoon shower.



   With the water roaring in my ears--a sound not unlike twenty thousand fans

--I recall particular wins. Not wins the fans would remember, but wins that still

wake me at night. Squillari in Paris. Blake in New York. Pete in Australia. Then

I recall a few losses. I shake my head at the disappointments. I tell myself that

tonight will be an exam for which I've been studying twenty-nine years.

Whatever happens tonight, I've already been through it at least once before. If

it's a physical test, if it's mental, it's nothing new.



   Please let this be over.



   I don't want it to be over.



   I start to cry. I lean against the wall of the shower and let go.



I GIVE MYSELF STRICT ORDERS as I shave: Take it one point at a time. Make him work for

everything. No matter what happens, hold your head up. And for God's sake

enjoy it, or at least try to enjoy moments of it, even the pain, even the losing, if

that's what's in store.



   I think about my opponent, Marcos Baghdatis, and wonder what he's doing at

this moment. He's new to the tour, but not your typical newcomer. He's ranked

number eight in the world. He's a big strong Greek kid from Cyprus, in the

middle of a superb year. He's reached the final of the Australian Open and the

semis of Wimbledon. I know him fairly well. During last year's U.S. Open we

played a practice set. Typically I don't play practice sets with other players

during a Grand Slam, but Baghdatis asked with disarming grace. A TV show

from Cyprus was doing a piece about him, and he asked if it would be all right if

they filmed us practicing. Sure, I said. Why not? I won the practice set, 6�2, and

afterward he was all smiles. I saw that he's the type who smiles when he's happy

or nervous, and you can't tell which. It reminded me of someone, but I couldn't

think who.



   I told Baghdatis that he played a little like me, and he said it was no accident.

He grew up with pictures of me on his bedroom wall, patterned his game after

mine. In other words, tonight I'll be playing my mirror image. He'll play from

the back of the court, take the ball early, swing for the fences, just like me. It's

going to be toe-to-toe tennis, each of us trying to impose our will, each of us

looking for chances to smoke a backhand up the line. He doesn't have an

overwhelming serve, nor do I, which means long points, long rallies, lots of

energy and time expended. I brace myself for flurries, combinations, a tennis of

attrition, the most brutal form of the sport.



   Of course the one stark difference between me and Baghdatis is physical. We

have different bodies. He has my former body. He's nimble, fast, spry. I'll have

to beat the younger version of myself if I am to keep the older version going. I

close my eyes and say: Control what you can control.



   I say it again, aloud. Saying it aloud makes me feel brave.



   I shut off the water and stand, shivering. How much easier it is to be brave

under a stream of piping hot water. I remind myself, however, that hot-water

bravery isn't true bravery. What you feel doesn't matter in the end; it's what you

do that makes you brave.



S . TEFANIE AND THE KIDS RETURN Time to make the Gil Water.



   I sweat a lot, more than most players, so I need to begin hydrating many hours

before a match. I down quarts of a magic elixir invented for me by Gil, my

trainer for the last seventeen years. Gil Water is a blend of carbs, electrolytes,

salt, vitamins, and a few other ingredients Gil keeps a closely guarded secret.

(He's been tinkering with his recipe for two decades.) He usually starts force-

feeding me Gil Water the night before a match, and keeps forcing me right up to

match time. Then I sip it as the match wears on. At different stages I sip different

versions, each a different color. Pink for energy, red for recovery, brown for

replenishment.



   The kids love helping me mix Gil Water. They fight over who gets to scoop

out the powders, who gets to hold the funnel, who gets to pour it all into plastic

water bottles. No one but me, however, can pack the bottles into my bag, along

with my clothes and towels and books and shades and wristbands. (My rackets,

as always, go in later.) No one but me touches my tennis bag, and when it's

finally packed, it stands by the door, like an assassin's kit, a sign that the day has

lurched that much closer to the witching hour.



   At five, Gil rings from the lobby.



   He says, You ready? Time to throw down. It's on, Andre. It's on.



   Nowadays everyone says It's on, but Gil has been saying it for years, and no

one says it the way he does. When Gil says It's on, I feel my booster rockets fire,

my adrenaline glands pump like geysers. I feel as if I can lift a car over my head.



   Stefanie gathers the children at the door and tells them it's time for Daddy to

leave. What do you say, guys?

   Jaden shouts, Kick butt, Daddy!



   Kick butt, Jaz says, copying her brother.

   Stefanie kisses me and says nothing, because there's nothing to say.



IN THE TOWN CAR Gil sits in the front seat, dressed sharp. Black shirt, black tie, black

jacket. He dresses for every match as if it's a blind date or a mob hit. Now and

then he checks his long black hair in the side mirror or rearview. I sit in the

backseat with Darren, my coach, an Aussie who always rocks a Hollywood tan

and the smile of a guy who just hit the Powerball. For a few minutes no one says

anything. Then Gil speaks the lyrics of one of our favorites, an old Roy Clark

ballad, and his deep basso fills the car:



        Just going through the motions and pretending

        we have something left to gain--



   He looks to me, waits.

   I say, We Can't Build a Fire in the Rain.



   He laughs. I laugh. For a second I forget my nervous butterflies.

   Butterflies are funny. Some days they make you run to the toilet. Other days

they make you horny. Other days they make you laugh, and long for the fight.

Deciding which type of butterflies you've got going (monarchs or moths) is the

first order of business when you're driving to the arena. Figuring out your

butterflies, deciphering what they say about the status of your mind and body, is

the first step to making them work for you. One of the thousand lessons I've

learned from Gil.

   I ask Darren for his thoughts on Baghdatis. How aggressive do I want to be

tonight? Tennis is about degrees of aggression. You want to be aggressive

enough to control a point, not so aggressive that you sacrifice control and expose

yourself to unnecessary risk. My questions about Baghdatis are these: How will

he try to hurt me? If I hit a backhand crosscourt to start a point, some players

will be patient, others will make a statement right away, crush the ball up the line

or come hard to the net. Since I've never played Baghdatis outside of our one

practice set, I want to know how he'll react to conservative play. Will he step up

and jack that routine crosscourt, or lie back, bide his time?



   Darren says, Mate, I think if you get too conservative on your rally shot, you

can expect this guy to move around it and hurt you with his forehand.

   I see.



   As far as his backhand goes, he can't hit it easily up the line. He won't be

quick to pull that trigger. So if you find he is hitting backhands up the line, that

definitely means you're not putting enough steam on your rally shot.



   Does he move well?



   Yes, he's a good mover. But he's not comfortable being on the defensive. He's

a better mover offensively than defensively.



   Hm.



   We pull up to the stadium. Fans are milling about. I sign a few autographs,

then duck through a small door. I walk down a long tunnel and into the locker

room. Gil goes off to consult with security. He always wants them to know

exactly when we're going out to the court to practice, and when we're coming

back. Darren and I drop our bags and walk straight to the training room. I lie on

a table and beg the first trainer who comes near me to knead my back. Darren

ducks out and returns five minutes later, carrying eight freshly strung rackets. He

sets them atop my bag. He knows I want to place them in the bag myself.



   I obsess about my bag. I keep it meticulously organized, and I make no

apologies for this anal retentiveness. The bag is my briefcase, suitcase, toolbox,

lunchbox, and palette. I need it just right, always. The bag is what I carry onto

the court, and what I carry off, two moments when all my senses are extra acute,

so I can feel every ounce of its weight. If someone were to slip a pair of argyle

socks into my tennis bag, I'd feel it. The tennis bag is a lot like your heart--you

have to know what's in it at all times.



   It's also a question of functionality. I need my eight rackets stacked

chronologically in the tennis bag, the most recently strung racket on the bottom

and the least recently strung on the top, because the longer a racket sits, the more

tension it loses. I always start a match with the racket strung least recently,

because I know that's the racket with the loosest tension.



   My racket stringer is old school, Old World, a Czech artiste named Roman.

He's the best, and he needs to be: a string job can mean the difference in a

match, and a match can mean the difference in a career, and a career can mean

the difference in countless lives. When I pull a fresh racket from my bag and try

to serve out a match, the string tension can be worth hundreds of thousands of

dollars. Because I'm playing for my family, my charitable foundation, my

school, every string is like a wire in an airplane engine. Given all that lies

beyond my control, I obsess about the few things I can control, and racket

tension is one such thing.

   So vital is Roman to my game that I take him on the road. He's officially a

resident of New York, but when I'm playing in Wimbledon, he lives in London,

and when I'm playing in the French Open, he's a Parisian. Occasionally, feeling

lost and lonely in some foreign city, I'll sit with Roman and watch him string a

few rackets. It's not that I don't trust him. Just the opposite: I'm calmed,

grounded, inspired by watching a craftsman. It reminds me of the singular

importance in this world of a job done well.



   The raw rackets come to Roman in a great big box from the factory, and

they're always a mess. To the naked eye they look identical; to Roman they're as

different as faces in a crowd. He spins them, back and forth, furrows his brow,

then makes his calculations. At last he begins. He starts by removing the factory

grip and putting on my grip, the custom grip I've had since I was fourteen. My

grip is as personal as my thumbprint, a by-product not just of my hand shape and

finger length but the size of my calluses and the force of my squeeze. Roman has

a mold of my grip, which he applies to the racket. Then he wraps the mold with

calfskin, which he pounds thinner and thinner until it's the width he wants. A

millimeter difference, near the end of a four-hour match, can feel as irritating

and distracting as a pebble in my shoe.



   With the grip just so, Roman laces in the synthetic strings. He tightens them,

loosens them, tightens them, tunes them as carefully as strings on a viola. Then

he stencils them and vigorously waves them through the air, to let the stenciling

dry. Some stringers stencil the rackets right before match time, which I find

wildly inconsiderate and unprofessional. The stencil rubs off on the balls, and

there's nothing worse than playing a guy who gets red and black paint on the

balls. I like order and cleanliness, and that means no stencil-specked balls.

Disorder is distraction, and every distraction on the court is a potential turning

point.



   Darren opens two cans of balls and shoves two balls in his pocket. I take a

gulp of Gil Water, then a last leak before warm-ups. James, the security guard,

leads us into the tunnel. As usual he's squeezed into a tight yellow security shirt,

and he gives me a wink, as if to say, We security guards are supposed to be

impartial, but I'm rooting for you.



   James has been at the U.S. Open almost as long as I have. He's led me down

this tunnel before and after glorious wins and excruciating losses. Large, kind,

with tough-guy scars that he wears with pride, James is a bit like Gil. It's almost

as though he takes over for Gil during those few hours on the court, when I'm

outside Gil's sphere of influence. There are people you count on seeing at the

U.S. Open--office staffers, ball boys, trainers--and their presence is always

reassuring. They help you remember where and who you are. James is at the top

of that list. He's one of the first people I look for when I walk into Arthur Ashe

Stadium. Seeing him, I know I'm back in New York, and I'm in good hands.



   Ever since 1993, when a spectator in Hamburg rushed onto the court and

stabbed Monica Seles during a match, the U.S. Open has positioned one security

guard behind each player's chair during all breaks and changeovers. James

always makes sure to be the one behind my chair. His inability to remain

impartial is endlessly charming. During a grueling match, I'll often catch James

looking concerned, and I'll whisper, Don't worry, James, I've got this chump

today. It always makes him chuckle.



   Now, walking me out to the practice courts, he's not chuckling. He looks sad.

He knows that this could be our last night together. Still, he doesn't deviate from

our pre-match ritual. He says the same thing he always says:



   Let me help you with that bag.



   No, James, no one carries my bag but me.



   I've told James that when I was seven years old I saw Jimmy Connors make

someone carry his bag, as though he were Julius Caesar. I vowed then and there

that I would always carry my own.



   OK, James says, smiling. I know, I know. I remember. Just wanted to help.



   Then I say: James, you got my back today?



   I got your back, baby. I got it. Don't worry about nothing. Just take care of

business.



   We emerge into a dusky September night, the sky a smear of violet and orange

and smog. I walk to the stands, shake hands with a few fans, sign a few more

autographs before practicing. There are four practice courts, and James knows I

want the one farthest from the crowd, so Darren and I can have a little privacy as

we hit and talk strategy.



   I groan as I guide the first backhand up the line to Darren's forehand.



   Don't hit that shot tonight, he says. Baghdatis will hurt you with that.



   Really?



   Trust me, mate.



   And you say he moves well?



   Yes, quite well.



   We hit for twenty-eight minutes. I don't know why I notice these details--the

length of an afternoon shower, the duration of a practice session, the color of

James's shirt. I don't want to notice, but I do, all the time, and then I remember

forever. My memory isn't like my tennis bag; I have no say over its contents.

Everything goes in, and nothing ever seems to come out.



   My back feels OK. Normal stiffness, but the excruciating pain is gone. The

cortisone is working. I feel good--though, of course, the definition of good has

evolved in recent years. Still, I feel better than I did when I opened my eyes this

morning, when I thought of forfeiting. I might be able to do this. Of course

tomorrow there will be severe physical consequences, but I can't dwell on

tomorrow any more than I can dwell on yesterday.



   Back inside the locker room I pull off my sweaty clothes and jump in the

shower. My third shower of the day is short, utilitarian. No time for coaching or

crying. I slip on dry shorts, a T-shirt, put my feet up in the training room. I drink

more Gil Water, as much as I can hold, because it's six thirty, and the match is

nearly one hour off.



   There is a TV above the training table, and I try to watch the news. I can't. I

walk down to the offices and look in on the secretaries and officials of the U.S.

Open. They're busy. They don't have time to talk. I step through a small door.

Stefanie and the children have arrived. They're in a little playground outside the

locker room. Jaden and Jaz are taking turns on the plastic slide. Stefanie is

grateful, I can tell, to have the children here for distraction. She's more keyed up

than I. She looks almost irritated. Her frown says, This thing should have started

already! Come on! I love the way my wife spoils for a fight.



   I talk to her and the children for a few minutes, but I can't hear a word they're

saying. My mind is far away. Stefanie sees. She feels. You don't win twenty-two

Grand Slams without a highly developed intuition. Besides, she was the same

way before her matches. She sends me back into the locker room: Go. We'll be

here. Do what you need to do.



   She won't watch the match from ground level. It's too close for her. She'll

stay in a skybox with the children, alternately pacing, praying, and covering her

eyes.



PERE, ONE OF the senior trainers, walks in. I can tell which of his trays is for me: the

one with the two giant foam donuts and two dozen precut strips of tape. I lie on

one of six training tables, and Pere sits at my feet. A messy business, getting

these dogs ready for war, so he puts a trash can under them. I like that Pere is

tidy, meticulous, the Roman of calluses. First he takes a long Q-tip and applies

an inky goo that makes my skin sticky, my instep purple. There's no washing off

that ink. My instep hasn't been ink-free since Reagan was president. Now Pere

sprays on skin toughener. He lets that dry, then taps a foam donut onto each

callus. Next come the strips of tape, which are like rice paper. They instantly

become part of my skin. He wraps each big toe until it's the size of a sparkplug.

Finally he tapes the bottoms of my feet. He knows my pressure points, where I

land, where I need extra layers of padding.



   I thank him, put on my shoes, unlaced. Now, as everything begins to slow

down, the volume goes up. Moments ago the stadium was quiet, now it's beyond

loud. The air is filled with a buzzing, a humming, the sound of fans rushing to

their seats, hurrying to get settled, because they don't want to miss a minute of

what's coming.



   I stand, shake out my legs.



   I won't sit again.



   I try a jog down the hall. Not bad. The back is holding. All systems go.



   Across the locker room I see Baghdatis. He's suited up, fussing with his hair

in front of a mirror. He's flicking it, combing it, pulling it back. Wow, he has a

lot of hair. Now he's positioning his headband, a white Cochise wrap. He gets it

perfect, then gives one last tug on his ponytail. A decidedly more glamorous pre-

match ritual than cushioning your toe calluses. I remember my hair issues early

in my career. For a moment I feel jealous. I miss my hair. Then I run a hand over

my bare scalp and feel grateful that, with all the things I'm worried about right

now, hair isn't one of them.



   Baghdatis begins stretching, bending at the waist. He stands on one leg and

pulls one knee to his chest. Nothing is quite so unsettling as watching your

opponent do pilates, yoga, and tai chi when you can't so much as curtsy. He now

maneuvers his hips in ways I haven't dared since I was seven.



   And yet he's doing too much. He's antsy. I can almost hear his central nervous

system, a sound like the buzz of the stadium. I watch the interaction between

him and his coaches, and they're antsy too. Their faces, their body language,

their coloring, everything tells me they know they're in for a street fight, and

they're not sure they want it. I always like my opponent and his team to show

nervous energy. A good omen, but also a sign of respect.



   Baghdatis sees me and smiles. I remember that he smiles when he's happy or

nervous, and you can never tell which. Again, it reminds me of someone, and I

can't think who.



   I raise a hand. Good luck.

   He raises a hand. We who are about to die ...

   I duck into the tunnel for one last word with Gil, who's staked out a corner

where he can be alone but still keep an eye on everything. He puts his arms

around me, tells me he loves me, he's proud of me. I find Stefanie and give her

one last kiss. She's bobbing, weaving, stomping her feet. She'd give anything to

slip on a skirt, grab a racket, and join me out there. My pugnacious bride. She

tries a smile but it ends up a wince. I see in her face everything she wants to say

but will not let herself say. I hear every word she refuses to utter: Enjoy, savor,

take it all in, notice each fleeting detail, because this could be it, and even though

you hate tennis, you might just miss it after tonight.



   This is what she wants to say, but instead she kisses me and says what she

always says before I go out there, the thing I've come to count on like air and

sleep and Gil Water.



   Go kick some butt.



AN OFFICIAL OF THE U.S. O , PEN wearing a suit and carrying a walkie-talkie as long as my

forearm, approaches. He seems to be in charge of network coverage and on-court

security. He seems to be in charge of everything, including arrivals and

departures at LaGuardia. Five minutes, he says.



   I turn to someone and ask, What time is it?



   Go time, they say.

   No. I mean, what time? Is it seven thirty? Seven twenty? I don't know, and it

suddenly feels important. But there are no clocks.

   Darren and I turn to each other. His Adam's apple goes up and down.



   Mate, he says, your homework is done. You're ready.

   I nod.

   He holds out his fist for a bump. Just one bump, because that's what we did

before my first-round win earlier this week. We're both superstitious, so

however we start a tournament, that's how we finish. I stare at Darren's fist, give

it one decisive bump, but don't dare lift my gaze and make eye contact. I know

Darren is tearing up, and I know what that sight will do to me.



   Last things: I lace up my shoes. I tape my wrist. I always tape my own wrist,

ever since my injury in 1993. I tie my shoes.



   Please let this be over.

   I'm not ready for it to be over.

   Mr. Agassi, it's time.



   I'm ready.



   I walk into the tunnel, three steps behind Baghdatis, James again leading the

way. We stop, wait for a signal. The buzzing sound all around us becomes

louder. The tunnel is meat-locker cold. I know this tunnel as well as I know the

front foyer of my house, and yet tonight it feels about fifty degrees colder than

usual and a football field longer. I look to the side. There along the walls are the

familiar photos of former champions. Navratilova. Lendl. McEnroe. Stefanie.

Me. The portraits are three feet tall and spaced evenly--too evenly. They're like

trees in a new suburban development. I tell myself: Stop noticing such things.

Time to narrow your mind, the way the tunnel narrows your vision.



   The head of security yells, OK, everyone, it's showtime!



   We walk.



   By careful prearrangement, Baghdatis stays three paces ahead as we move

toward the light. Suddenly a second light, a blinding ethereal light, is in our

faces. A TV camera. A reporter asks Baghdatis how he feels. He says something

I can't hear.



   Now the camera is closer to my face and the reporter is asking the same

question.



   Could be your last match ever, the reporter says. How does that make you

feel?



   I answer, no idea what I'm saying. But after years of practice I have a sense

that I'm saying what he wants me to say, what I'm expected to say. Then I

resume walking, on legs that don't feel like my own.



   The temperature rises dramatically as we near the door to the court. The

buzzing is now deafening. Baghdatis bursts through first. He knows how much

attention my retirement has been getting. He reads the papers. He expects to play

the villain tonight. He thinks he's prepared. I let him go, let him hear the buzzing

turn to cheers. I let him think the crowd is cheering for both of us. Then I walk

out. Now the cheers triple. Baghdatis turns and realizes the first cheer was for

him, but this cheer is mine, all mine, which forces him to revise his expectations

and reconsider what's in store. Without hitting a single ball I've caused a major

swing in his sense of well-being. A trick of the trade. An old-timer's trick.



   The crowd gets louder as we find our way to our chairs. It's louder than I

thought it would be, louder than I've ever heard it in New York. I keep my eyes

lowered, let the noise wash over me. They love this moment; they love tennis. I



---

[Cuối tài liệu]

and numbers. It's as close as I'll ever come, or want to come, to studying

for final exams.



   I asked J.R. many times to put his name on this book. He felt, however,

that only one name belonged on the cover. Though proud of the work we

did together, he said he couldn't see signing his name to another man's life.

These are your stories, he said, your people, your battles. It was the kind of

generosity I first saw on display in his memoir. I knew not to argue.

Stubbornness is another quality we share. But I insisted on using this space

to describe the extent of J.R.'s role and to publicly thank him.



   I also want to mention the dedicated team of first readers to whom J.R.

and I passed copies and excerpts of the manuscript. Each contributed in

significant ways. Deepest thanks to Phillip and Marti Agassi, Sloan and

Roger Barnett, Ivan Blumberg, Darren Cahill, Wendy Netkin Cohen, Brad

Gilbert, David Gilmore, Chris and Varanda Handy, Bill Husted, McGraw

Milhaven, Steve Miller, Dorothy Moehringer, John and Joni Parenti, Gil

Reyes, Jaimee Rose, Gun Ruder, John Russell, Brooke Shields, Wendi

Stewart Goodson, and Barbra Streisand.



   A special thanks to Ron Boreta for being rock solid, for reading me as

closely as he read this book, for giving me invaluable advice about

everything from psychology to strategy, and for helping me rethink and

revise my longstanding definition of the words best friend.



   Above all, I want to thank Stefanie, Jaden, and Jaz Agassi. Forced to do

without me on countless days, forced to share me for two years with this

book, they never once complained, they only encouraged, which enabled

me to finish. The steadfast love and support of Stefanie provided constant

inspiration, and the daily smiles of Jaden and Jaz converted to energy as

quickly as food turns to blood sugar.



   One day, while I was working on the second draft, Jaden had a playmate

over to the house. Manuscripts were piled high along the kitchen counter,

and Jaden's friend asked: What's all that?



   That's my Daddy's book, Jaden said in a voice I'd never heard him use

for anything but Santa Claus and Guitar Hero.



   I hope he and his sister feel that same pride in this book ten years from

now, and thirty, and sixty. It was written for them, but also to them. I hope it

helps them avoid some of the traps I walked right into. More, I hope it will

be one of many books that give them comfort, guidance, pleasure. I was late

in discovering the magic of books. Of all my many mistakes that I want my

children to avoid, I put that one near the top of the list.

                                                                                                           ILLUSTRATION CREDITS



Courtesy of Andre Agassi

Courtesy of Andre Agassi

James Bollettieri

Michael Cole

John C. Russell / Team Russell

John Parenti

Michael Cole

Mike Nelson AFP Getty Images

Gary M. Prior / Getty Images

both Nicolas Luttiau / Presse Sports

top John C. Russell / Team Russell

bottom Don Emmert AFP Getty Images

Michael Cole

Denise Truscello

                                This Is a Borzoi Book Published by Alfred A. Knopf



                                     Copyright � 2009 by AKA Publishing, LLC



All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc.,

                   New York, and in Canada by random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.



                                                    www.aaknopf.com



         Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.



                                Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

                                                  Agassi, Andre, 1970�



                                 Open : an autobiography / Andre Agassi.--1st ed.

                                                            p. cm.



                                                      "Borzoi Book."

                                               eISBN: 978-0-307-59280-4

                    1. Agassi, Andre, 1970� 2. Tennis players--United States--Biography.



                                                           I. Title.

                                                    GV994.A43A43 2009

                                         796.342092--dc22 2009024004

                                                     [B]



                                                             v3.0

               Table of Contents



Title Page

Dedication

The End

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

The Beginning

Acknowledgments

Illustration Credits

Copyright