The
Championships
Wimbledon
at Wimbledon,
England
Monday, 23 June 2008
Lleyton Hewitt def. Robin Haase 6-7 (4-7), 6-3, 6-3, 6-7 (1-7), 6-2
Q. Obviously a very tough match. Good to get through.
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, you know, tried to do as much homework before
the match. Spoke to quite a few players. I'd never really seen him play
that much before. And, you know, all the guys I spoke to and had played
against him said he was a very dangerous player.
So, you know, I was expecting a tough match out there today. Yeah, he
served extremely well for five sets. Perhaps, you know, lost his first
serve percentage a little bit in the fifth set, which I had to take
advantage of.
But apart from that, you know, he's got a lot of firepower from both
sides as well.
Q. Does it get harder to come through five set matches like that
as you get older, do you think?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yes and no. But, you know, if I get into a fifth set
I'm feeling pretty confident. So, you know, obviously I was disappointed
that I lost the fourth set because I felt like I had the whole momentum
in the fourth set. I just wasn't quite able to get those, you know,
little chances or take those chances throughout the fourth set.
But, you know, obviously he came out and won it in a tiebreak. You
know, I was a little thankful that I was going to be advantage in the
fifth set.
Q. Do you think it was your experience that counted against his
maybe?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, a little bit. I lost serve once for the match,
and that was only at 5-1 in the third set, I think. So apart from that I
really didn't feel like I was under pressure a lot on my service games,
and I felt like I was putting a lot more pressure on his.
That's the good thing about five sets out there. The fifth set is an
advantage set. Even though he played a couple of great sets where I
couldn't break his serve, I was still able to get, you know, through.
Q. These are pretty crucial times for the ATP. Are you satisfied
with the board election that took place this weekend? Do you favor
retaining Etienne de Villiers as the chairman or would you like to see a
change at the top?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, I didn't I still don't know anything about the
board, who is on the board or the council. To tell you the truth, I
haven't been that worried about it, especially this week.
Yeah, right at the moment I haven't been on the tour leading into the
French Open, whatever, when the guys were having a lot of talk about
what should probably be going on in that. Right at the moment I'm not
too fussed.
Q. Does it worry you that it was that hard a game on day one? Does
it affect your confidence at all about how far you can go this time?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really. When you sit down at the start of the
tournament, to win the tournament, you have to win seven best of five
matches. You got to get through those seven matches somehow.
Every opponent's different, and my opponent on Wednesday's gonna be
it's gonna be chalk and cheese with the guy that I played today in terms
of my whole strategy against him. They're both styles of play as well.
You really have to focus on that match that you have to come up against.
Q. Do your expectations lower as you get further away from 2002?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really, no.
Q. When you say "chalk and cheese," what do you remember of
Montanes from the last time you played him two years ago?
LLEYTON HEWITT: On grass he doesn't have the biggest serve. He's not
going to serve me off the court like this guy could potentially today.
Yeah, he's got a sneaky sort of slice serve out there and then a pretty
good kick second serve, but you're always going to have a shot at it.
The toughest thing, he's a clay court specialist, there's no doubt
about that. He's going to have a good forehand and he moves well. But,
you know, he's not going to feel that comfortable on grass, which is a
good thing.
Q. How, specifically, does the hip affect you when you're playing?
Is it about speed? Is it about direction?
LLEYTON HEWITT: A little bit of everything, yeah. It's sort of yeah,
every shot pretty much at different times. Obviously, when I've got to
move and get in certain positions, then it's a lot worse obviously.
But it's not just one position that, you know, I sort of say, yeah,
that's it. That's where I feel it, so...
Q. Could you estimate what percentage fitness you are at at the
moment?
LLEYTON HEWITT: It's hard to put a number on it really. Right at the
moment I'm probably a little worse than four hours ago (smiling). But,
yeah, it's hard to put a number on it. But come Wednesday I'll be fine.
Q. What do you do treatment wise between now and then?
LLEYTON HEWITT: There's not a whole lot I can really do to turn it
around in such short notice. It's more ice, massage, yeah, just
stretching, trying to not make it any worse in the next 24 hours, 48
hours.
Q. How many foot faults were you called for? How distracting is
that to you?
LLEYTON HEWITT: I'm not sure how many got called in the end. The more
distracting part is probably, yeah, after you get called once you stand
back a bit further obviously, because for some reason there's only one
person that kept calling. We played two and a half sets without that one
person when they changed people, and then the same bloke came back again
and I got done again.
That was my query to Fergus Murphy in the chair. Even when that other
person down the other baseline end wasn't calling foot faults. And then
we swapped and got two totally new people when they changed linespeople
and they both didn't call it.
Then this bloke's come back again and called it, so that was my
biggest query.
Q. Was he right to call your conduct unsportsmanlike?
LLEYTON HEWITT: When I tapped the ball over to him?
Q. Whatever the guy in the chair called you unsportsmanlike for.
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah. After I held serve I just tapped the ball
across. It didn't touch him.
Q. Was it a fair call by him, or not?
LLEYTON HEWITT: I would doubt it. No, I would be fighting that.
Q. When you come back each year, do you have any sense of how many
more Wimbledons you have left in you?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really. I guess more so probably with injuries
you're just never sure what's around the corner. Obviously coming here
this year, yeah, for me two months ago, there were probably a few doubts
that I'd be able to play here. Speaking to doctors and getting scans and
that.
I had to make decisions on where I felt I was at and whether it was,
you know, too much risk to come and play here and the French Open.
So, yeah, probably more so from an injury front you just don't know
what's around the corner. But in terms of playing, yeah, doesn't cross
my mind. I'm thankful that I'm here this year and enjoying it.
Q. I think I'm right that you were hitting with Andy Murray over
the weekend here.
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, we warmed up one day.
Q. Can you give us an indication, did his game seem pretty sharp
to you?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, we didn't do anything the day we hit. It was
blowing a hurricane yesterday, so... It was very hard to judge where
Andy's at just on that hit. Obviously he's got an outside chance of
doing well here and going into the second week of a Grand Slam.
I don't think he's made a quarterfinal of a Grand Slam yet. I have no
idea what his draw's like. But potentially with the way that he plays,
he moves extremely well on this surface, he's got a shot.
Q. Do you have any advice for Gooch, whose Grand Slam record is a
bit underwhelming at this point, and he had another disappointing loss
today. Do you speak to him at all about how he can turn things around?
He is obviously the successor to you clearly when you do go.
LLEYTON HEWITT: I only just found out before I walked in here that
he'd lost today. Yeah, it's a tough one. Playing a lucky loser, I don't
know when he would have found out that he's playing a different guy. I
don't know if he knew much about the guy, as well.
It's a tough situation in that, but there's no doubt that he's got to
take advantage of that, as well. So, yeah, he's been a little under the
weather this whole week, as well, which isn't the best thing. But over
five sets on this surface, he'd have to like his chances.
Yeah, even if he's not feeling a hundred percent he's got to try and
find a way to get through those matches in Grand Slams. That's where
he's really got to get to that next level, that's what he needs to do.
Q. What do you think of your draw with Federer in the fourth
round?
LLEYTON HEWITT: Not even focused on that at the moment. I got to get
there.
Q. Doesn't wake you up in the middle of the night?
LLEYTON HEWITT: I might play him in the final if I was in the other
half. I'm not sure what you're getting to.
Q. Do you spend much time with the sort of up and coming kids in
Australia like Bernard Tomic?
LLEYTON HEWITT: I haven't spent a lot with Bernard. He was at our
last Davis Cup tie. That was pretty much the first time I met him, seen
him around at all. I probably spent more time. Out of the juniors,
probably Brydan Klein over the last couple years, purely because he's
been at Davis Cup ties, I've been able to hit with him quite a bit.
You try and help them out as much as possible. I've had some of the
younger guys come across to my house in Sydney and hit there as well.
Yeah, when it fits in, it's good for them, and it's good for me, as
well.
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