Pete Sampras, Great Soul
By Kim Shanley
I’m sorry, Pete. I was wrong. I thought you should have retired a year
ago. After you won your 13th Grand Slam at Wimbledon in 2000, you wanted
to give it another year. You wanted the glory one last time, wanted to
see, in your own words, if you had one Slam more in you. But it was
obvious to me after a full year of trying—and I think to nearly every
other tennis fan on the planet—that you didn’t. And when I saw you fall in
the first round of the French this year, I knew for sure you didn’t.
Pete looked to be through coming into the open but like many
others, I was too quick to write him off. |
Pete, it looked all wrong. Your first serves, those Zeus-like
thunderbolts, were now erratic slingshots. Your untouchable second serve,
now fodder for the Gaudenzi’s of the world. Sure, you had lost a step, but
who could begrudge you that after the million grueling sets you’ve put
yourself through? No, it wasn’t the loss of raw speed around the court,
but the off-balance and jerky way you moved through your shots that
convinced me that the immortal grace you once played with had now deserted
you.
When I saw you sitting slumped over, head in your hands, after your loss
to the qualifier George Bastl at Wimbledon, my heart ached for you. “Don’t
do this to your self, Pete,” I said to myself. “Don’t go out like this,
man. You are too great and proud a champion to walk off the stage like
this.”
But you stuck to your guns. You said you had another great moment in you.
So I settled into watching your opening matches at this year’s U.S. Open
with a sinking feeling in my gut that I was going to once again watch you
flail after your impossible dream. Until, that is, I saw your serves in
your first few games of your opening match. One thunderbolt after another!
“Hmmm, I said to myself, this is definitely different.” Then when I saw
you hit a few backhand winners in the 2nd and 3rd rounds, I said, now this
is really different. You haven’t hit a backhand like that, well, since
last year’s U.S. Open. You hung tough with Rusedski for five sets, and
somehow pulled it out. Hass falls, Roddick falls. Not only did you have
momentum, but the old fluidity had returned. Now you were dictating play,
forcing your opponents to feed your forehand, and then unleashing shots
that seem to rocket through the court. Even your flex-your-shoulders,
cock-of-the walk strut was back!
But Pete, I’m sorry, even after you beat Schalken in the semis, I still
couldn’t believe you could do it. After all, you had to face either Hewitt
or Agassi in the final without a day’s rest. No day off, that’s what
brought your two previous runs at the U.S. Open to a crushing loss in the
final. Your body just couldn’t recover. And I knew Hewitt’s or Agassi’s
would.
But by the time you walked onto the court Sunday against Andre, you had
become Pete Sampras again, the Pete Sampras who had won 13 Grand Slam
titles, the Pete Sampras whose cracking serves now once again sent even
Agassi, the game’s greatest returner, into a state of near-fatalism. Up
two sets to love, what a shock!
Down two sets in the final, Andre wasn't about to give up. |
But Agassi wasn’t about to give up. Maybe Barbara Streisand didn’t
quite get it right when she called Agassi a Zen-master, but there’s no
doubt Andre has a big soul. All you have to do is look at the intensity of
his gaze as he tries to discern the initial movement of the ball off the
server’s racquet to know his being is animated by a burning spirit.
So, Pete, I wasn’t surprised Andre won the third set and, seemingly, was
ready to steam-roll you off the court. The magic deserted you towards the
end of that third set. The lack of a day off, which had brought your
dreams crashing to earth the last two years, had finally caught up with
you.
But this is where you surprised me more than at any other time in your
amazing run at your 14th Grand Slam championship. You reached deep, pulled
yourself together after the 7-5 loss in the third set, and began playing
that fourth set with a steely conviction to try to push this one over the
top. You reached deep, deep in that final set. Deep, back to your bitter
loss to Stefan Edberg in the 1991 Open final. Back to single-handedly
winning the 1995 Davis Cup final against Russia and collapsing after a
grueling five set win against Andrei Chesnokov. Back to your famous
episode against Alex Corretja in the 1996 Open quarter-finals, back to the
exhausting last year of your six year run as the number one tennis player
in the world, and back to your last grand slam title at Wimbledon, beating
Pat Rafter before your family.
Ah, Pete, I’m sorry I doubted you. Like Andre, you have grown a great soul
throughout all the years of victories and in the last two years of
defeats. No one deserved to hold the champion’s cup above his head more
than you on Sunday. Bask in the applause and kudos, they are all deserved.
You say you might want to make another run at a Grand Slam title? Go for
it, man, I’ll never doubt you again.
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