I am a hero worshiper. I love the number one tennis player. I love the number one baseball player. I want to see those records broken.
I used to play a lot of racket sports, tennis and squash.
Once in a while I'll get moved to do some exercise. It's something I long for but the biggest problem is bending down and putting my tennis shoes on. Once I go out I'm OK.
I've been playing against older and stronger competition my whole life. It has made me a better tennis player and able to play against this kind of level despite their strength and experience.
A great tennis career is something that a 15-year-old normally doesn't have. I hope my example helps other teens believe they can accomplish things they never thought possible.
I did realise more than ever, after the stabbing, that tennis is a business - a tough business.
I have this terrible dark side to my personality, which playing tennis keeps at bay.
You will never have great tennis champions from England because of the cold and dark, but most of all because people only care about the sport for two weeks a year, and then they're on to something else. There's just not a great love of the sport there.
Tennis has to become everything to you if you're going to make it to the top. You have to live it.
Tennis is so competitive. I guess that's the way it has to be.
Golfers are forever working on mechanics. My tennis swing hasn't changed in 10 years.
I let my racket do the talking. That's what I am all about, really. I just go out and win tennis matches.
If Davis Cup was a little bit less or once every two years, I would be more inclined to play. But the way it is now, it is too much tennis for me.
In tennis, you can make a couple of mistakes and still win. Not in golf. I played three rounds in that Tahoe event, and I was drained. Mentally, not physically.
People know me. I'm not going to produce any cartwheels out there. I'm not going to belong on Comedy Central. I'll always be a tennis player, not a celebrity.