Men's Tennis
Results/Schedules
ATP Rankings
Players
Women's Tennis
Results/Schedules
WTA Rankings
Players
 Saturday, January 15
Agassi-Graf romance hasn't dimmed Agassi
 
Associated Press

  MELBOURNE, Australia -- In his many tennis incarnations, Andre Agassi has gained almost as much attention for the women who watched him from the guest box as for the titles he won.

There was Barbra Streisand, proclaiming him a Zen master. There was Brooke Shields, his former wife and most ardent cheerleader. And now as the Australian Open kicks off Monday (Sunday night in the United States), there is Steffi Graf, smiling and grimacing and bobbing her head in encouragement from her courtside seat.

Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf
Andre Agassi's romance with Steffi Graf has resulted in Agassi picking up a few tennis pointers.
Graf obviously has more going for her where tennis is concerned. She has taught Agassi the subtleties of the sliced backhand since they began their romance four months ago. She is also the only player in history who can match him as a winner of all four Grand Slam championships and an Olympic gold medal.

Agassi and Graf would make an intriguing mixed doubles team, though the last time Graf played mixed, with John McEnroe at Wimbledon last summer, it ended unhappily.

Graf quit their fine run to concentrate on her quest for one last singles title. She lost in the final to Lindsay Davenport and promptly retired.

Agassi, soon to turn 30, is not thinking about retirement -- or, at least, he's not talking about it. And with good reason: the top-seeded Agassi has a chance to become the first man to reach four straight Grand Slam finals since Rod Laver swept them all in 1969. Last year, Agassi sandwiched the French and U.S. Open titles around a runner-up finish at Wimbledon.

Agassi arrived in Melbourne fit and feisty, even downright nasty when the subject of his reported marriage to Graf came up. Rather than just denying a story out of Britain about a secret wedding, he ridiculed an Australian reporter who asked about it, saying sarcastically that 20 invitations were sent out "to the most intelligent and professional journalists. Sorry you weren't there."

It was a comment as sharp as any of his two-fisted shots, and it silenced everyone in the room.

Maybe that's a sign that a new love hasn't dimmed Agassi's competitive fire. Certainly he's the biggest threat to No. 3-seeded Pete Sampras, who is going for a record 13th Grand Slam title. Sampras won the Australian in 1994 and 1997 but lost to Agassi in the 1995 final.

As he did at the U.S. Open, Agassi is strutting around bare-chested in practice, proudly revealing his trim physique.

"Thank you for noticing," he told a female reporter who commented on his six-pack abdomen.

Agassi insists that his best tennis is ahead of him, no matter what the calendar says. And after coming back from a low of No. 141 in November 1997, when retirement really was on his mind, he is determined to stay in shape to get the most out of the remainder of his career.

"I have way too much appreciation these days for what it takes to come back again, and I have a hunch that if I slipped, that would be the end of it," he said shortly after arriving in Melbourne.

"So, my goal is to hit every level I feel I can hit with my game. I still felt motivated highly at the end of the year, and even now, because I feel as long as I'm staying healthy, getting stronger physically, I can play even better tennis. Ultimately, that is what you want. As an athlete, you want to feel like you saw your best, and I still think that is ahead of me."

The men's draw is weakened by injuries to two-time U.S. Open champion and Australian favorite Patrick Rafter, former Australian finalist Marcelo Rios of Chile and former U.S. Open finalist Greg Rusedski of Britain.
 


ALSO SEE
Serena, Davenport will try to overcome Hingis

Drysdale: Pete still the player to beat

Shriver: Top seeds are the favorites

Rafter 'definitely' won't play singles at Australian Open