Та завсегда, мнев удовольствие))) *Не то что у Рафы, и у Маськи переодически - одни сплошные ребусы))))*
Любимый Нолик
Сообщений 241 страница 270 из 800
Поделиться2422008-01-13 21:10:04
:pooh_lol: эт да...Нолика даже слушать приятно и все понятно в основном,не то,что у этих двоих с горячей кашей во рту
Поделиться2432008-01-13 22:01:27
зачем он вам,если половина так точно не любит "слишком тощего" Нолика?
Я люблю_)) он зайка,смешной и добрый) та ктчо пойдём оччаровывать)) или пристовать ( что -то я ене о том думаю, вернее о том, но личностьне та))))
Да он тощий, но зато ЗАЙКА!!!!!!!!!
Поделиться2442008-01-13 22:02:28
:pooh_lol: ну все,можно не приезжать на КД.Конкуренция слишком велика
Поделиться2452008-01-13 22:03:34
ну все,можно не приезжать на КД.Конкуренция слишком велика
Нет мы тебе его уступим.если попросишь)))))))))))))))))
Поделиться2462008-01-13 22:05:00
:pooh_lol: вот еще...не буду я так унижаться и кого-то о чем-то просить :pooh_lol:
Поделиться2472008-01-13 22:06:29
Дек ты не унижайся, ты просто скаджи приказным томом, мы и отстанем) да ещё и поморгать будем)) мыж толкьо рады!
Поделиться2482008-01-13 22:07:02
:pooh_lol: я подумаю
Поделиться2492008-01-13 22:08:56
Думай,думай))))) мы толкьо ЗА!!!!!!!!!
Поделиться2502008-01-13 22:19:50
например?
Чтонить прикольное) как письмо диме..
Поделиться2512008-01-14 14:07:43
когда писали Диме,была идея.Тут идеи нет :dntknw:
Поделиться2522008-01-14 14:53:51
The man they call the Djoker
TELL people that you have just interviewed Novak Djokovic and the first question they ask is: was he funny?
Djokovic is, after all, famous for outing his inner John Travolta in a tight white suit on a Montreal catwalk, stripping off at the barest excuse, singing all-night karaoke with Maria Sharapova in New York, and mimicking his friends and rivals down to the last nervous tic or underwear tug.
Clearly, he is a born entertainer, even if not everyone would have chuckled at his joke during Perth’s Hopman Cup about enjoying mixed doubles because it affords him the best view of his partner bending over at the net. Yet nor, any longer, is there any doubt that Djokovic has the substance, and results, to match his extrovert’s flash.
He reached his first grand slam final at the US Open, has ridden his all-court game to No. 3 with a bullet and has Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal looking over their shoulders with, perhaps, a small degree of irritation. But is Djokovic a showman, or, simply, a show-off?
“Ah , no, no, no, no,” Djokovic protests, aghast. “If I have to choose between these two things, I would say showman, for sure. Even though now I’m pretty popular in my country and tennis is the No. 1 sport, and I’m very flattered that the people recognise me and come up and give me compliments, I’m more a person who likes to have privacy and peace.
“Since the first moment I started to watch tennis on the TV, I started to imitate all these players, and I did it all throughout my career, but now the people started noticing it more because of my popularity and my success I had on the court. Some people say I just do it to get all the attention on me, to show off, but it’s not true.
“I’m trying to enjoy my lie as much as I can and I know that tennis hopefully is going to be my life the next 10, 15 years. I’m going to travel the tour, I’m going to visit more or less the same place, so you have to take it more or less in a positive way, and take everything with a smile — bring out the positive energy, make the people laugh, enjoy yourself, and that’s what I’m doing.”
Anyone lamenting the sport’s lack of personalities should dial-a-Djokovic. His official website has its star in three poses, including one emphasising his “irresistible charm”. In John McEnroe’s words, he is “cocky, but in a good way”, and perhaps that is the best description, although his sometime Australian volleying coach, Mark Woodforde, offered some advice during last year’s net tutorials about not overdoing the funster routine and giving rivals cause to feel miffed.
“You can beat them with your racquet; that’s what disturbs them. Don’t give them any extra (motivation) by trying to take off Nadal, picking your pants out of your bum,” says Woodforde. “In a particular time and place, the crowd will love it, but you don’t need to overdo it, and I think he gets that, but sometimes I think that youthful exuberance takes over.
“Has he got up Roger’s nose? Yes, and probably up Rafa’s a little bit, as well. How nice is it when there’s two of you standing up at the top of the mountain, you don’t want to share it around, but then all of a sudden someone comes barging up and clawing at you and it can hurt. Novak has left some marks on them, so I don’t know whether they’re worried that he could knock them off, or it’s just that the personalities haven’t meshed. It could be both.”
Even Djokovic admits that he senses a slight edge to his relationship with Federer, whose greatness as “the most complete player that this sport ever had” the young Serb goes to great pains to emphasise. Federer described as “insignificant” his loss in the Montreal fi nal, and has not always been as effusive with his praise as for other wannabe contenders. Could Roger, for whatever reason, be just a little bit niggly?
“It might be, yeah, because of the results, and obviously he feels that I’m slightly coming closer,” Djokovic said. “I just got to that third place of the world, I had two major wins in 2007, in Montreal and Miami, I played finals of the grand slam, semi-finals (of the French), so I had some pretty impressive results, and probably because of that it might change.
“Not everybody can like what I do, and if you feel that somebody is coming up closer to you and starting the rivalry and everything, you maybe change your position to him. Me, I don’t have a different opinion about him or either Rafa. They are my rivals, I can say, but they are my colleagues, as well, in the life and in the business. I see a lot of them during the year and I really respect them both, because I think they are fantastic players, especially Roger, for me.”
McEnroe has said he believes an unusual lack of reverence is part of the key to Djokovic’s success, while Woodforde believes it can also be costly at times, recalling an example of harmless bravado during a Channel Seven promo for last year’s fourth-round match at the Australian Open, in which the challenger predicted boldly that he would beat the champ. Then again, what was he supposed to say? That he expected to lose bravely in three sets?
“That reverberated around the lockerroom, got back to Roger, who probably thought, ‘I’m going to take care of the guy tonight’ and he did,” said Woodforde.
“So it’s added a bit of juice to their rivalryand, hopefully, it does become a great rivalry, because that’s what we need. I wouldn’t think that Roger or Rafael dislike Novak, they’re just very much aware he’s becoming a very good player.”
That much is not in dispute, and Djokovic has expected nothing less. He first declared he would be No. 1 about seven or eight years ago and nothing has caused his belief — or that of his family, including talented younger brothers Marko, the Serbian 16-and-under champion, and precocious Djorde, the 11-year-old Novak rates as the bigger talent — to waver since then.
Still, it has been quite a ride. Two years ago in Australia, he was the loud guy with the odd Beefeater-style helmet of hair who entertained the crowd with his antics at the Hopman Cup. Last year he returned as the youngest player in the top 20, to win the Adelaide title and then reach the last 16 at the Open. Now, as Lleyton Hewitt concedes, two has become three at the top of the game, and there is a long gap to fourth.
Yet while doubts remain in some circles about his ability under intense pressure or in extreme adversity — it is hard, for example, to imagine Hewitt retiring from a Wimbledon semi-final with blisters — there is also plenty to admire. “I love his head — he’s such a smart guy out there,” says Martina Navratilova. “I like his attitude, on and off the court.”
Even though, on the surface, there is not one thing he does spectacularly well. There’s no Sampras serve, no Agassi return, no Federer forehand.
What Djokovic does is almost everything extremely competently, on every surface, and he hired Woodforde for two stints last year to improve the one part that is lacking: his net game.
So what does Djokovic like about the way Djokovic plays?
"I like my groundstrokes, I can say. I like it. That's my game — I'm a groundstroke player and I play pretty aggressive. I like the fast rallies, I try to be pretty fast on the court and I spend quite a bit of energy which I will try to work on in the near future to reduce this spending of energy a little bit more and make my serve a little bit varied and get more free points, and, of course, to use my opportunities so I can get to the net."
It was not surprising Woodforde noted that Djokovic was a man in a hurry, worrying at first that he would have to spend hours and hours on the blue-collar approach work just behind the service line, and wanting to immediately storm the net to make a spectacular winner. "I had to just get it across to him that it doesn't happen overnight," says Woodforde.
Yet so much else seems to have done. Barely out of his teens, the Serbian is 2-6 against Nadal and 1-5 with Federer, but all three wins have come in the past year, and on hardcourts, and so the Australian Open appeals as one of his best grand slam opportunities.
Second-year blues? Andy Roddick offers a cautionary note. "It will be interesting this year to see how Novak goes. He had a good year last year, now he is No. 3 in the world, and people will be coming after him. It's going to be a new position for him."
Djokovic had already been warned about the difficulties of following up a breakthrough year, but refuses to approach 2008 negatively or nervously. "I'm really looking forward to this season, because I know I have enough quality to be one of the best players of the world and I know I have enough quality to be one of the favourites for every grand slam, so this is one of my priority goals."
So, to a lesser but still important degree, is his need to reduce the ridiculously excessive ball-bouncing that has become an habitual part of his service routine. His record, is, incredibly, 36 for the first serve and 29 — on the same point — for the second. Never mind the spectators' frustration; his back is now also starting to show the strain.
"This is something that came along this year which is, I think, a bad habit, and it can hurt me. I'm bending so much time when I'm bouncing, the muscle gets tight, and after a while it gets tired and sore and that's the main reason why I have back problems. This is something that comes from my head, it's a mental problem and hopefully in the future I can work that out. I hope to get down to 10, maximum. I don't need more!"
What Djokovic would like is the week of practice he is seeking with his idol, Pete Sampras, whose 1993 Wimbledon victory was Djokovic's great inspiration, but whom he never saw play in person and has never met. It may happen in March, before Indian Wells and Miami, with the possibility of some exhibition matches attached, but that is still to be confirmed. Two greater opposites it is hard to imagine, and Djokovic admits they have little in common, either in game or personality.
All of this leaves one last question to be answered: was Novak Djokovic funny? The answer: not strictly speaking, but he was marvellously accommodating, expansive — the answer to his first question ran for nearly 300 words — and appealing. If Djokovic is a show-off, the game needs more of them.
Поделиться2532008-01-14 14:55:03
Djokovic : "I'm going to go for the number 1 spot, for sure!"
12.01.08 08:05
Novak Djokovic , the "third man" in world tennis, will from Monday go out to change history at the Australian Open, to deny that the fight for the top spot in 2008 will be exclusively a matter for Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal .
"I'm going to go for the number 1 spot, for sure!" the Serb told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa in an interview.
He confessed he would have liked to be "a profesional skier, a football player, a businessman... even a rock star."
But the showman of the ATP circuit and the great surprise of the 2007 season with his titles in Miami and Montreal and a place in the final at the US Open knows he should focus on tennis.
"I'm a very, very happy guy! It's like a dream come true, to play so well in every surface, so consistent..." he said of his breakthrough year.
"It's great for the future, I didn't expect to do so well, but I showed that I deserve this place because I'm working hard."
Unlike other players in the circuit, Djokovic is open and spontaneous.
"I always tried to be nice to everybody and make a good image about myself, but at the same time to stay natural and normal," he noted.
Of his famous impressions of other players, he stressed they are a part of him.
"Imitations are not something I'm doing now, it's something I've been doing all my life. Since a kid I have been trying to copy the other players. I was watching Sampras and all these guys on TV, and I started to copy them, I loved Sampras," he recalled.
Djokovic admitted that sometimes it is difficult to stay positive.
"Yes, there are those moments, when you don't want to practice or be with other people. But you have to. It's my life, this is what I chose. I need to work on my image, on my tennis and improve in every stage of my life," he said conscientiously.
His mother defined the young player as the "typical Serbian man, full of passion," and he agrees.
"Obviously my mother knows me better than I know myself. I think that's true, I like to be passionate and to enjoy everything I do, tennis, practicing, off the court. I like to be positive and have fun, it's my life," the player said.
This positive outlook shows when he speaks of his chances of overtaking Nadal or even Federer on the world ranking.
"Everybody has goals, I try to focus on my career and not to look on Nadal or whatever he does. I try to keep my focus on tennis and go the right way, so one day I can reach my goal of being the number one in the world. It's still a long way, because Federer is very dominant, but he is not going to be there forever," Djokovic said.
Of the world number one's plans to keep playing at least until 2012, the Serb noted that that means little.
"He is not unbeatable. Rafa won against him, me, Nalbandian ... Everybody has a right to hope for something. I was always confindent about myself, and I truly believe that I can reach the first place in the world, I wouldn't mind if is going to be in ten years, five years, two or one year. It doesn't have to be next year," he stressed.
Djokovic insisted that he would not even be disappointed if he did not make it to the top spot at all during his career.
"I would be happy, because there is something I dedicated my life to, I travelled a lot and met people, had the chance to see so many things... You have to appreciate smaller things, you can't be expecting the highest, highest, highest! You have to be satisfied with smaller things," he said.
Still, he does not give up on number one and is out to get it, but at the same time not ready to sacrifice everything for the purpose.
"I'm going to go for that goal. For sure!" he said. "I don't have to push myself over the limits. Why? I still have to live my life. I'm 20 years old, why miss all the nice things in life?" Djokovic noted.
He accepts that the year that follows the breakthrough is often the hardest.
"I will try to reduce my tournaments this year, to put even more effort in the Grand Slams and the Masters Series event. If you have a little gap between tournaments you have a little bit more time to recover, to practice and to play," he said.
Поделиться2542008-01-14 17:13:56
когда писали Диме,была идея.Тут идеи нет
Напишем что мы "его фан клуб" и хотим встеретитсья с ним в москве)))
Поделиться2552008-01-14 17:14:47
начинай
Поделиться2562008-01-14 17:23:59
Тока надо на инглише) если народ поддержит я напишу))
Поделиться2572008-01-14 17:25:36
а не катит:сначала придумать по-русски,а потом наш великий переводчик Катрин переведет?
Поделиться2582008-01-14 17:28:24
То жа вариант
Поделиться2592008-01-14 17:33:22
так мы ж так Марату письмо уже писали
Поделиться2602008-01-14 17:35:59
Помню)))
Кстати у маратки скоро ДР!!
Поделиться2612008-01-14 17:37:27
я надеюсь,ты не намекаешь на очередной шедевр?
Поделиться2622008-01-14 17:44:57
Ага)) именно) и желательно по веселее))0
Поделиться2632008-01-14 18:05:13
о!Тогда это без меня.У меня творческий кризис
Поделиться2642008-01-14 21:29:05
Переведу - через месяц))) терпит? Гыыыы, а насчет поздравления Маратке... ГЫыы, думайте, у нас КД вепреди)))
Поделиться2652008-01-14 21:35:53
эт да...Нолика даже слушать приятно и все понятно в основном,не то,что у этих двоих с горячей кашей во рту
Гыыы, ну я как профессионал - понимаю и этих))) А у Ноле - замечательный класический сербский акцент)))
Поделиться2662008-01-14 23:08:27
о!Тогда это без меня.У меня творческий кризис
Это ка ктак!?!?(( не верю((
Поделиться2682008-01-15 11:41:30
Вчерашняя ПК Нолика
Q. How did it feel to come out here as third seed as opposed to last year when you were much lower ranked?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, of course, having such a great season and getting to the third place of the world and getting to the new season as the third player of the world, it's a big pleasure, and I'm really happy for that.
But in the other hand, it's a big responsibility as well, knowing that there is a lot of expectations. Probably even here, you know, people expect me to get far 'cause of the results in 2007 on hard courts.
But, you know, I'm not trying to think about that too much. I really just want to focus on my game. I've been working a lot recently on some elements in the game, try to improve and, you know, just try to be even more consistent with the results.
It's a good start of the year.
Q. What was the difference in the first two sets and the third today?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, I started really well. Honestly saying, I was nervous before the match, knowing that I'm a big favorite in the first round against a player, who is, you know, in top hundred for two years already.
He's a good player. He serves well. He's very well‑known for the last man who won against Andre Agassi. It wasn't easy. You know, he didn't have anything to lose.
But I was really focused on the start and just tried to think about the match and the court and what happens there.
But I lost my momentum a little bit in the third set. He started to serve better and he went for the shots, which he was not doing in the first two sets. So that resulted with, you know, a better result for him.
I had my ups and downs in the third set. I managed to come back, had some chances. But, you know, it's good to win in the straight sets always the first match and not to experience the big heat, which is one of the trouble factors here in Australia.
But it wasn't big heat today, so hopefully it's going to be good weather throughout the week.
Q. How did you find the speed of the court?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: I think it's slower than the last year. I didn't want to comment too much about the court until I really feel it on the match.
So today I felt really good. I think it suits to my game. But I think it's a little bit slower than the last year's surface. And the center court is quite different. That's my opinion.
Because I've practiced on some other courts, Vodafone Arena and some of the outside courts, and I think some outside courts are a little bit slower and the ball bounces higher.
Of course, it's the same for every professional player. We all have the same conditions. So to someone it's better; to someone it's not good. But, you know, you got to get used to it.
Q. At the Masters Cup you talked about how tired you were from such a long year.
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Yeah.
Q. What did you do during your break to recharge?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Nothing (laughter). Well, I tried not to do anything. That's a real rest. That was necessary for me after such a long season. I played I think most of the matches in the ATP Tour, so I needed really to take it easy.
I was aware of the fact that I'm gonna start my preparation period a little bit later. But, you know, it wasn't affecting me he so much in a negative way 'cause I have been practicing a lot. Physically I'm ready, and mentally as well. I have a lot of motivation to do well this season, especially here in the Australian Open.
I'm very happy to start well in the new season.
Q. When you were asked afterwards to do those impersonations, you didn't look too comfortable.
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: I didn't, 'cause there was a lot of talks in the last couple months about me doing these impersonations. As I was saying many times before, I wasn't really trying to, you know, make fun of anybody or offend anybody.
It's just that, you know, it's something that I think, my opinion, brings up some positive energy and something different. I mean, I'm not trying to be different; just trying to enjoy. That's all.
I don't like when, you know, people comment about those kind of things in a negative way. So I didn't want to get more of these comments by doing again the impersonations. You know, I don't know. People made me do it, so...
It's good that I just did Maria. I didn't want to do any of the other tennis players.
Q. She doesn't mind?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: She doesn't mind. She's okay with it.
Q. When somebody in the top 10 loses in the first round, as Andy did, is that a reminder to people like yourselves who are the fancied guys, that you have to be totally switched on from the first ball?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, again, it all depends from the person. Again, this is the first bigger tournament of the year and it's a Grand Slam, so everybody has a motivation more to play and to win.
The loss of the top 10 player in the first round just shows another time how tough today men's tennis is. You could see even yesterday when Rafa played against my countryman, who is 126 in the world, you know, he was struggling the first two sets.
He played well, Troicki, and Rafa was trying to get the moment, trying to get used to the conditions. Always the first matches are dangerous, especially if you play against lower‑ranked players who really want to prove and to show to the people they have a good quality, that he can play good tennis. It's really unpredictable.
You can't say that, you know, top 5 or top 10 player's going to get through easy to the third round, you know. So I think it's quite different than the women's tennis.
Men's tennis is really unpredictable. You see a lot of five‑set matches in the first round.
Q. Do you feel more pressure now because of your ranking and the expectation that is on you?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, yeah, it's natural that you feel the pressure. If you don't feel pressure something is wrong with you, but it's a matter of how you deal with the pressure.
I'm trying not to think about that too much, about the expectations, about the people saying, You got enough quality to win a Grand Slam this year, especially in Australia or US Open, because of the hard courts.
It's very flattering when the people, you know, talk about me in the positive way, of course. But, you know, it kind of puts a lot of pressure. I'm only 20 years old, so hopefully, you know, I'm going to have another 10 or 15 years of the professional tennis.
I'm going to take it easy and try to focus myself on what I do.
Q. Tonight's match is a little bit different. Usually when Roger plays, we know how great he is. Do you think the players are going to be more interested than usual because there's this health issue? People wonder if he's ready to play the tournament.
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: I've seen him only one time. We greet each other, but I haven't talked to him about his problems.
I'm sure that he solved that. It's just a small issue. I mean, he's a great champion, great tennis player. As I say, it's always unpredictable. It's a sport. But he's always dealing with this with no problem.
Q. You mentioned a moment ago five‑setters, not a lot of tournaments these days where you play five sets. You have quite a good record: 7‑3. What goes in to someone who is a good five‑set player? Are you aware of other players who have good or bad records in five sets?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, it's a matter, I think, of experience in some way. You got to play a lot. You got to be on the tour. It's a mental game, as well, besides of course the physical part. You need to be really physically ready to hold on in tough matches in the big heat.
But, again, in these deciding points, moments, only the mentally strong players are really the champions, and that's the difference, I think. You don't get that just like ‑‑ you know, you're not born with that. You practice. You get it with experience and, you know, playing more matches on the tour.
And, you know, it comes up to, you know, five sets. When you get to the fifth set, of course if you're positive in your mind you try to hold on and push yourself, and then I think you're going to get a positive outcome.
Q. You were talking about improving elements of your game. Can you elaborate on that? Any particular element or combination that you felt you really improved or are doing better?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, there's been a lot of talks, of course. I am aware that I could go more to the net, maybe I could improve a little bit more my serve because I'm, you know, pretty tall. So I have a lot of potential in these things, in these elements.
I've been working on them recently a lot, especially in this preparation period, because this is the only time when we can really have a couple of weeks of practice.
But, you know, it cannot come over the night. You know, I am trying to use my opportunities during the match 'cause I know that I'm a really good groundstroke player, powerful shots. I'm always trying to be aggressive.
A lot of times in the match it happens that I can finish off the point in a shorter time. So this is something which I'm going to do and work on in the future.
Q. What's it like having a bunch of teenage girls screaming that they love you?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well, as I said after the match, it's nice to see that, you know. I've been watching on the TV as a kid. Playing on the tour, I've seen a lot of supporters having those messages or whatever, writings on the shirts, some flags or something like that. It's always great to have support behind you.
It's a mental sport, as I said before. It's always good to have somebody behind your back who is trying to motivate you, to support you, so you can, you know, hold on to the pressure better.
Q. Two years ago you were in the little interview room with Andy Murray and Andy was giving a press conference about all his troubles.
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Out of 10 journalist, there were nine from England and one from Serbia.
Q. Are you surprised like how much has changed for both of you in that time?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: Well yeah. If I turn it around now and just look at the recent years, it's amazing how fast we got through and how fast we rise to the top 10 players of the world.
Obviously we have a lot of quality, a lot of potential. We've been more or less on the top of our generations throughout all the junior events. It's kind of expected from us to do well.
But on my side, I wasn't expecting to get to the third place of the world just after a couple of months last year. So it's really surprising.
But, you know, you're just try to hang in there and keep it up with the results.
Поделиться2692008-01-15 11:45:03
It's good that I just did Maria. I didn't want to do any of the other tennis players.
Q. She doesn't mind?
NOVAK DJOKOVIC: She doesn't mind. She's okay with it.
Нет, блин, она подойдет к Нолику, скажет ему: "Джокович, ты дурак!" и каааааааак двинет ему ракеткой по башке