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coluchka

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Everything posted by coluchka

  1. 85th anniversary of the Russian sports club CSKA in Moscow on April 24
  2. Family Circle Cup 2008
  3. Beautiful girl!!
  4. Dubai Iconic photoshoot
  5. Thanks Classy! And more..
  6. Anna Kournikova took part in the first annual Nautica South Beach Triathlon in South Beach April 13. She placed second in the Female Relay.
  7. Thanks LuNo! Great pics!
  8. Thanks jal!!
  9. Sarah Michelle Gellar stops by her local Starbucks in Beverly Hills 2008-04-01 (credit: tfs)
  10. Thanks jal718! Great scans!! VS
  11. S. WILLIAMS/S. Kuznetsova 3‑6, 7‑5, 6‑3 An interview with: SERENA WILLIAMS THE MODERATOR: Questions, please. Q. What a superb match. It was probably worthy of a final. You must be very satisfying for you to come out on top having dug so deep? SERENA WILLIAMS: It's always good to come out on top. I think I was a little disappointed in the way I played, but, I mean, I'm just moving on. Q. Talk about the back injury and when you felt you were moving better. Looked like the second set. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, the physio came out, and I started to feel better right after she treated me. The first time I felt a lot better, and each time she came out it kept getting better. I just got stuck, like out of nowhere I just got stuck. It was just completely out of the blue, but it got better. Q. Do you recall which shot or movement it was? SERENA WILLIAMS: I don't remember if it was a movement or a shot. I don't remember. It was a long time ago, but I do remember it was just all of a sudden I felt stuck. Q. Is that why you were serving like in the 90s and holding back on your serve in the first set? SERENA WILLIAMS: Was I? Q. Yeah. SERENA WILLIAMS: Oh. I don't think so. Like I said, once she came out it got better, like straightaway, and it got even better after that. Q. Was this a match where mental toughness was really what it was all about to win this? SERENA WILLIAMS: I do think it was about being mentally tough and making the right shots at the right time and just never giving up. I played a really good opponent today who has been down several match points in this tournament already, so I knew going in she wasn't just going to give it to me. Q. What about the fitness factor? Nearly three hours, hot afternoon, and you seemed to be strong at the end. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, no, I don't feel tired or sore or anything at all. I don't feel ‑‑ I feel like I'm really fit. Even right now, I'm not tired. Q. Talk about the regimen you did since the Australian to get into such good shape. SERENA WILLIAMS: I've been working really hard. Q. Specifically? SERENA WILLIAMS: I'll write about it. You can buy it. Q. You said in the past you have a home court advantage here. Did you get any kind of a charge in the third set? SERENA WILLIAMS: Well, I had great support from the first game on, which was really good. It was clearly great support. This is one of my favorite tournaments. I love playing here. All my friends come out. I promised tickets for Saturday, so I was, like, I can't lose. I've got to stay in there a little bit longer. It was mainly my motivation. Q. At the start of the second set you were two breakpoints down, and you held onto that service game, and you held serve for the rest of that set and then broke Kuznetsova to win the set. I mean, obviously holding onto that first service game was crucial, wasn't it? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, it's definitely crucial. I mean, in this match, it seemed like every point was crucial, like at any point the match could have turned or went a different way. It was really a good match, just to focus on each point. You really have to be focused for everything. Q. It seemed like early on you were having problems with the forehand. What improved with that and just kind of what were you doing or not doing? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, I made some errors on any forehand for some unknown reason, and I wasn't doing the right technique. I thought about my third‑round match or whatever, fourth round or third round, Pennetta, how I kept making the errors. I thought, okay, I can correct it. And I corrected it and went on instead of just dwelling on it. Q. You moved very well in the third set. Is that kind of really a physical thing or mental thing because now you're really into the match? SERENA WILLIAMS: I think it's definitely both. I mean, clearly I wanted the match, but physically, like I said, I'm not tired. I feel like I was looking at the score ‑‑ at the time it was like two hours and 30 minutes. It was fine for me. I think it definitely was a little bit of both: The fact that I did want to win and the fact that I was re‑energized. Q. You always say facing Venus is the toughest thing for you. What's it like facing an opponent that just beat your sister? SERENA WILLIAMS: Umm. What is it like? I want to win for Venus, and so that always gives me a little extra motivation. But at the end of day, you just are trying to win every point, regardless, and trying to play well and learn from what my sister did wrong. Q. After you played so well against Justine, was it tough to overcome what might be seen as a natural letdown? SERENA WILLIAMS: I felt ‑‑ when I lost the first set, I felt I'm not the type of player to beat the No. 1 player and then come out and lose the next match. That's never been my strategy. It's never been my game. So I just maybe got off to a slow start and didn't take some opportunities. Q. Did that ten‑minute heat break help you guys? Seemed like you both broke each other a lot right after the break. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, it was annoying. It was like, jeez, I shouldn't have took the break, because I really didn't need it. I just decided I could at least change my clothes. When I came back out, I was like I don't know. I didn't need the break at all. It wasn't necessary. Q. Do you and Venus talk about the match before? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, yesterday we talked about it. She told me some things. Not too deep. Q. Was that a dinner table discussion for you or casually driving to the tournament? SERENA WILLIAMS: It was definitely a casual discussion. We were just talking about a lot different things and that came up briefly and we moved on. Q. How do you guys seem to escape the natural sibling rivalry? You say you want to win for Venus. I mean, that's not the normal. SERENA WILLIAMS: Well, I love her so much. It's like we're best friends. We're in the same ‑‑ I'm so blessed to have her in the same sport. It's a great feeling. I mean, she's going to be my sister way longer than I'm going to be playing tennis. I would hate to fall out with her because I lost a match. That wouldn't be worth it. We've been close since I was a little baby. She always took care of me. We're really close. Q. With this being one of your favorite tournaments, what would it mean for to you win it back to back? SERENA WILLIAMS: (Laughter.) I'm sorry, what was the question again? Q. You said it was one of your favorite tournaments here. Even though it's not a Grand Slam, what would it mean to win it back to back? SERENA WILLIAMS: It would mean a lot. I don't want lose any points here, and I'm glad that I was able to come through some tough matches. I just want to start winning other tournaments, you know. This one, I love. Believe me, I want to win this right now more than anyone. But I'm also just so focused right now. I just feel like I'm so focused, not just on this event but on everything else starting with the clay court season. Q. Are you focused on your next opponent, possibly Jankovic or Zvonareva? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. I think I've played a great tournament, and I'm just happy to be still in it and doing the best I can do. As long as I'm doing the right thing on the court, I feel like I can come out on top, but I just have to make sure I'm doing what's right. Q. Will you watch the match tonight? SERENA WILLIAMS: I'll probably watch a little bit of it. Q. Are you thinking that this is the fifth time? And why did you change to wear the hat? SERENA WILLIAMS: It was hot, and I did well in the hat the other day, so I figured I should wear it today. I think I played ‑‑ last year, I was really tired after, because it was so hot and I had like a heat headache. Like, I definitely want to wear the hat. Q. What about the fifth time? SERENA WILLIAMS: I haven't won anything five times except for ‑‑ I win all the time in Uno. I don't know think that counts. Unless there's a tour coming on that. Q. I think you're going to play Charleston but not Amelia? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. I don't think I'm entered in Amelia but I know I'm entered in Charleston. I'll definitely be there. I look forward to it. Q. How important is that event as a jump off to the red clay in Europe, or are they so dissimilar surfaces? SERENA WILLIAMS: I love that event. I have a lot of support there. I never won that event and I would like to win there. I did terrible last year, so I have nothing to lose when I go there. All I do is win some rounds and, you know, help my rankings so that's what my next goal is. I have a couple tournaments to do that, just looking forward. Q. You've seen how tough it is to be ranked No. 1 and be down lower and having to meet seeds early on. Do people really appreciate how difficult it is to fight your way to a title from, say, No. 8 or 9 seeds than it is form the No. 1 position? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, it definitely is difficult. You have to play the seeds earlier, like the No. 1 players sooner. My whole theory is eventually you have to play everyone, so that's how I look at it. Seems like I'm not ranked as high as I want to be right now. Q. Is the green clay a good jump off for the red clay, or are they so dissimilar? SERENA WILLIAMS: I think they're similar. I mean, clay is clay. They're both going to be a lot slower than the hard court. The green clay isn't as slow as the red clay, but it's getting you prepared for that. I grew up on green clay, so I'll be fine. Q. Matches like the one you had with Justine where everything was working and the match today where everything wasn't working particularly well from the start, is there some satisfaction from overcoming that and gutting it out? SERENA WILLIAMS: I'm not a 100% happy with the way I played today. I mean, I'm glad I won, but I feel like I could have done a lot better. I'm just going to try to make little adjustments. Q. Were you frustrated by the number of breakpoint opportunities that you let slip? You converted 5 out of 16. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. I definitely think I could have done a lot better on those points and I didn't take the opportunities the way I could have. I guess this match is over. FastScripts by ASAP Sports
  12. Serena: In a class of her own by: James Martin, TENNIS.com posted: Wednesday, April 2, 2008 For years, Serena Williams's apologists have argued that little sis is the best player in the world. Forget what the rankings say. Never mind that she's a part-time player with one foot on the court and another in Hollywood. Pay no attention to whether she appears to be in shape. It doesn't matter. When Serena Williams decides to concentrate on tennis, so the apologists tell us, she will beat anyone, anywhere, anytime. For years, I've never been able to bring myself to support this argument. If Williams is not No. 1, for whatever reason, she's not the best player in the world. Well, forget it. After watching Williams destroy Justine Henin in the quarterfinals of Miami this week, I now count myself as one of the converted, a card-carrying member of the Serena Williams appreciation club. How many times do I have to watch Williams pull a disappearing act (in February, she vanished for emergency dental surgery) only to return to the court and thrash the top players before I believe that she is, indeed, the best player in tennis when she puts her mind to it? There has never been a player who can so easily come and go as he or she pleases. Not Bjorn Borg. Not John McEnroe. Not Martina Navratilova. Not Chris Evert. Serena is in a class all her own. She's kind of like the game's version of the actor Daniel Day-Lewis. That guy breaks all the conventions -- he spends most of his time doing woodwork rather than incessantly honing his acting chops, and then eventually comes out of hiding to put on a virtuoso display. Could Serena Williams clean up if she focused on tennis 24/7? I'm not betting against her. But what does that say about the state of the women's game that a part-time player can thrash someone like Henin, who, the computer tells us, is the No. 1 player in the world? On some level it might bespeak a lack of depth on the WTA Tour. But proficiency with strokes and strategy isn't where Serena Williams holds the formidable edge. It's her attitude. Serena Williams is fearless. She goes for all of her shots, from serves to swinging volleys, with the intention of putting the ball away or blasting right through her opponent. This isn't to say that Williams is immune to choking, but that she is the rarest of players who has an uncanny and unwavering belief in her ability to execute every time she steps on to the court. It doesn't matter how fit she is or how many matches she's played. Serena never loses the plot. Williams' father, Richard, deserves credit for giving his daughter this borderline bizarre self-confidence. It can make Serena sound beyond arrogant at times, and positively strange at others. It also makes her the era's defining champion. What about Williams' competition? Henin can be fragile. You get the sense that Ana Ivanovic still doesn't completely believe that she belongs on the biggest stages. Jelena Jankovic? Please. Nicole Vaidisova, once thought to be a future No. 1, is a mental midget. Svetlana Kuznetsova? She's lost eight of her last nine finals. Maria Sharapova is the only player who comes close to matching Serena Williams' fearlessness. When Williams deigns to show up, she is the best player in tennis. And most, if not all, of the players are intimidated by her. Can you blame them? http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/blog/index?...amp;name=tennis
  13. S. Williams/J. Henin 6‑2, 6‑0 An interview with: SERENA WILLIAMS THE MODERATOR: Questions, please. Q. Today's performance reminded everybody of your performance last year when you took Maria Sharapova apart at a similar stage, and then you reminded everybody afterwards that you always expect the best of yourself. Today you were pretty near your best, weren't you? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. I didn't make as many errors as I usually do, and, you know, I've been practicing like a champ. Today I finally started playing a little bit the way I've been practicing. Q. Is there a tournament anywhere else in the world where you feel as comfortable and sort of as much as, This is my place? SERENA WILLIAMS: I feel really comfortable at Wimbledon, believe it or not. I feel really comfortable, I don't know, because I like the grass. But definitely here I feel ‑‑ I don't know why I do well here. Maybe it's something in the water. (laughter.) Q. What was the big difference today compared to three performances against the last two? SERENA WILLIAMS: Today I was just was able to ‑‑ I didn't make as many errors. I stayed positive no matter what happened. I think that was a good turnaround. Just mostly the errors. The error count wasn't nearly as high as it's been in the past. Q. So many people here at the tournament have been buzzing about just how good you look physically on the court. You've not looked this good since... can you finish that sentence? SERENA WILLIAMS: Since 1982. (laughter.) Q. Serious question. SERENA WILLIAMS: That was a serious answer. (laughter.) Q. You talked about when you came in about how you've been practicing a lot more than usual. Like how much more? How hard have you really been working for this? SERENA WILLIAMS: Well, I've really ‑‑ not just this tournament. This isn't my goal. My goal was just for the future, not here or, you know, last ‑‑ the next week. But my goal is just in the long term to have less injuries and just to keep focused. I've been saying that tennis is my priority, and I feel that it is. Hopefully my results will finally start to show what I've been practicing and working on so diligently. Q. Last time I heard you say you practiced like a champ was before the Australian last year when you were starting from a lower fitness point. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, it's definitely easier. I'm definitely way more fit than last year even at this tournament. I feel I'm moving better. I feel definitely I could be more fit and just in better shape, but I'm taking it one day at a time and looking at it in the long‑term picture. Q. Were you surprised at how easy it was today? Did it cross your mind? SERENA WILLIAMS: The first set was 42 or 43 minutes, and usually with a 6‑2 score line it's 25 minutes. We definitely had a lot of long deuce games and a lot of games, but I just ‑‑ was I surprised at how easy? No, it was just ‑‑ it wasn't easy. It was just the fact of me making the right shots at the right time. Q. Since beating Justine here in the final last year, you've lost to her in the whole series of marquis quarterfinals in the Grand Slams. I guess today was payback day, wasn't it? SERENA WILLIAMS: No. It's kind of a letdown. I wish this was a Grand Slam more than anything. (laughter.) I mean, I'm going to try do this at a Grand Slam and not only at this tournament. Q. If your sister wins tonight you would play. You played back in India. Last time on a big, big stage was US Open in '05. Seems like it's been a while. SERENA WILLIAMS: Definitely been a while. Not for me, because I played her in India. It was a tough match. It was like two‑and‑a‑half hours. Q. Was it? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. So I look forward to ‑‑ you know, obviously I want her to win. So, you know, clearly I want her to win. I want her to do well, but I'll have to deal with that when it comes. Q. Has it gotten easier or harder to play her over the years? SERENA WILLIAMS: No, no, no, definitely easier. Definitely easier, because now we really, really leave everything out on the court. And for me, since I was younger I kind of got angry if I lost. I had a bad attitude. She always had a positive attitude whether she won or lost, but for me it's easier. Now I know that I'm going to leave everything I can on the court, and then whatever happens, you know, at the end of the day, we're going to be sisters way longer than opponents. Q. She's stepped up the speed of her serve a little bit, both first and second. Your service returns today you had a number of winning service returns or forcing returns. Can you comment? SERENA WILLIAMS: You mean Venus stepped up her serve? Q. No, Justine. SERENA WILLIAMS: So what was the question? Q. Justine stepped up her serve quite a lot. Little more pace on the ball. But your service returning today was pretty extraordinary. Can you comment on that a bit? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, she definitely stepped up the pace. She was hitting what, 94 miles an hour second serve, which was harder than mine. They didn't feel like they were 94. Like I would look at the speed gun and felt like it was maybe 80. But I was ‑‑ you know, I thought she did well. I thought she played really well. Q. Is that because you were reading her serve better today? SERENA WILLIAMS: Maybe I was reading it better maybe. But I thought that, you know, she ‑‑ I just noticed it didn't have a lot of pace on it. She wasn't hitting them soft at all. Q. When you talk about errors going from 60 to 15 or whatever, how would you explain it? Is it just focus, or... SERENA WILLIAMS: No, some days you have bad days and I really ‑‑ I had a really bad day, and I was having really good practices and then, you know, I just had a bad day. Everything I hit didn't seem to want to go in and everything I tried wasn't working. Plus I wasn't doing the right things, so I think that obviously has a factor to do with it. Today I really wanted to focus on doing what I knew I should do. Q. Justine said she was lacking courage today against you. What do you think it says about you? SERENA WILLIAMS: I don't know what it says about me. I think she's a really courageous individual, and, you know, just all that she is accomplished is very courageous. Q. Will you still go and watch Venus' match tonight even though you may be on a collision course? SERENA WILLIAMS: I should go scout my opponent, right? (laughter.) Q. Do you think there's anything she can throw at you that you haven't seen? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah. Venus is playing unbelievable, so I wish it were a final, but if we play each other, and we have to win the tournament, one of us. Q. Back on Justine for a second. We perhaps overlooked today a couple of winning lobs by you. How much more variety is in your game today than, say, to even one year ago? SERENA WILLIAMS: My game has a lots of variety now. I hit a mean slice. I have a great ‑‑ I've always had a great lob. I've been playing a lot of doubles. I played a lot of doubles this year, which really kind of helps me, as well, develop my lob, my volleys again. So I really think that helps. Just playing doubles helps my game in general. Q. You were also coming in a lot to the net more than Justine. I think it's about double the amount you came into the net than Justine. SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, it's because I'm playing doubles and coming to the net a lot in doubles, and I have a lot of confidence in my volleys. I'm feeling good up there, so, you know, I'm having a lot of fun. So, yeah. Q. Is it also because Venus, last year she was kind of working on a transition game, coming to the net more? You saw at the US Open. Is it like you're following in her footsteps or... SERENA WILLIAMS: No. Usually I do follow in her footsteps, but I'm nearly a year late. I did notice she was coming to the net in Bangalore a lot. She's copying my game. I actually thought that it was vice versa. Q. One of your former neighbors, Andy Roddick, got himself engaged yesterday. What is your reaction to that? SERENA WILLIAMS: Oh, jeez. I couldn't believe it when he told me. It was like, Are you ‑‑ I thought he was joking. He's engaged to a really nice girl. Q. You know her? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, she's a great person. I've never seen him happier, so I'm really happy for him. Q. Is there any way that you or Venus would stay in the game longer than the other? Do you have any kind of an understanding that it's going to be the same time when you decide to leave the game? SERENA WILLIAMS: Yeah, no, Venus talks about staying for a long time, and I'm like, Jeez. But I figure I'm younger so I should probably stay at least three years longer. Q. That would be very different, though, wouldn't it? SERENA WILLIAMS: Would it be different? Q. I don't know. You tell me. I know you came into the game a bit later. SERENA WILLIAMS: Well, we also have ‑‑ I totally forgot what I was going to say. (laughter.) Oh, my God. Q. Alzheimer's? SERENA WILLIAMS: I have no idea what I was about to say. I blank out sometimes. I'm very sorry about that. It sucks. Believe me, I know. Q. So what do you still want to achieve in those three years? SERENA WILLIAMS: The three years after she retires? That could be ‑‑ that could be 2075 at this rate. Q. Where do you want to be at the end of the year in terms of rankings, and are you still looking to get back to No. 1 and dominate again the way you did once? SERENA WILLIAMS: I'm always looking to be back to No. 1, and I'm always looking to be on the top. I think I wouldn't be in tennis if I didn't expect or believe that I could be. I'm just fighting every day and hoping to get there soon. FastScripts by ASAP Sports
  14. coluchka

    Eva Longoria

    Eva Longoria, Orlando Bloom, Courteney Cox and Jennifer Aniston @ EBMRF Dinner in Honor of Ken Paves' Big Give, Hollywood, March 25 (credit: tfs)
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