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ARTICLE: Monica on the Olympics - 'There is no feeling like it'   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #130 of 291 |
[Source: http://makeashorterlink.com/?X13C21909]
>>>
By MIC HUBER
mic.huber@...

SARASOTA

Monica Seles will always cherish the bronze medal she won but that
prestigious memento is only part of her Olympic experience.

The medal she earned in the 2000 Olympics hardly compares with the
memories she gathered by simply being able to take part in the Games
and hanging out with the other competitors.

"It was just so awesome to talk to them," Seles said about being
able to interact with many of the top athletes in the world. "I
absolutely had a blast. I met a lot of other athletes from different
countries and was able to talk to them about the type of training
they had gone through."

Seles has accomplished just about everything possible in tennis. She
has won nine Grand Slam singles titles and 53 singles titles overall.

She has been ranked No. 1 in the world and earned almost $15 million
in prize money.

She has won about every award possible in tennis, including the
inaugural Sanex Hero of the Year Award in 2000. That award was the
result of voting on the Women's Tennis Association's official
website by fans of more than 90 countries, many of who were inspired
by Seles' comeback from a stabbing by a crazed fan in 1993.

The Sarasota resident has modeled, written a book, and is a partner
in the All-Star Café sports restaurant chain.

Yet, for all she has done, taking part in the Olympics remains at
the top of her list of accomplishments. It holds a special meaning
for the player who was born in Yugoslavia, moved to Bradenton as a
child and officially became a U.S. citizen in 1994.

"I would have to say that playing in the Olympics, for me, was one
of the highlights of my career," she said. "There is no feeling like
it.

"In tennis, you are always playing as an individual. In the
Olympics, you are playing for your country and you have teammates
there watching your match."

Seles actually has played in a pair of Olympics. She took part in
the Atlanta games in 1996 as the No. 1 seed and was shut out of the
medals when she was upset by Jana Novotná in a match Seles has
called "one of my tougher losses in my career."

She went to Sydney, Australia, in 2000 and won the bronze, losing to
eventual gold medal winner Venus Williams in the semifinals before
coming back to beat Jelena Dokic in the bronze-medal playoff match.

The medal was a bonus. The experience was what was most important.
In an age in which professional athletes are often jaded, Seles has
always appreciated her opportunity to share special experiences.

"For me, just walking in the opening ceremonies and staying in the
Olympic village was what was so wonderful," Seles said. "It is
really one of the few times in an athlete's life that you are around
other athletes who have gone through similar training regimens and
lifestyles that you have undergone."

One evening, Seles was walking back to her accommodations in the
village after eating dinner when she was stopped by a large American
athlete.

"He just comes up to me and says, 'Hi. How are you? I am a big fan
of yours,' " Seles recalled. "Then he starts telling me that he was
so worried about a big wrestling match he had the next day against
someone who had never lost in his career.

"I just said, 'Omigosh.' "

The athlete was Rulon Gardner, who the next day pulled one of the
greatest upsets in the Games by beating Alexander Karelin, a Russian
who had not lost a match in 13 years.

"Two days later, everybody knows (Gardner)," Seles said. "There were
so many cool experiences. It is great for tennis that it is in the
Olympics."

Tennis has been Seles' life ever since, as a small child, her father
began hitting tennis balls to her in a parking lot. Her father,
Karolj, would draw cartoon characters on the tennis balls and Seles
quickly showed the focus and talent that would take her to the top
of the sport.

Seles made her professional debut in 1988, at the age of 14 years,
three months. She won her first Grand Slam event by 1990, becoming
the youngest French Open champion at the age of 16 years, six months.

By 1991, Seles was ranked No. 1 in the world and that year, she won
three Grand Slam titles (French, Australian and U.S. Open). She won
the same three again in 1992 and was the runner-up at Wimbledon and
again was ranked No. 1 in the world.

Seles was still No. 1, and coming off another Australian Open
victory, when she was stabbed during a changeover at a tournament in
Hamburg, Germany, by Guenther Parche, a German who wished to see
Steffi Graf back at No. 1.

Seles returned in 1995 to get to the final of the U.S. Open and won
her last Grand Slam title the following January in Australia.

Last season, Seles was sidelined most of the year with a stress
fracture in her left foot. She has yet to play a tour event this
year but began playing competitively again recently in World
TeamTennis matches.

Seles won't be participating in this year's Summer Games in Athens,
but she remains committed to Olympics. For years, Seles has been
active in working with Special Olympics athletes.
<<<





Thu Aug 12, 2004 9:46 pm

andrewbroad
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[Source: http://makeashorterlink.com/?X13C21909] ... By MIC HUBER mic.huber@... SARASOTA Monica Seles will always cherish the bronze medal she...
andrewbroad
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Aug 12, 2004
9:47 pm
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