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You can't be the best player if suddenly you play well and the next day you play badly.
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I like Sergio Ramos, who plays Real Madrid.
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After you win, people expect you to always play so good. When that doesn't happen, it's hard to deal with.
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There's no room for being disappointed or for excuses, 'Oh, I had four match points.'
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It's difficult to always perform well, to always go on the court and win and hit great shots. It takes a lot of time and a long learning process.
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I think my style of game is aggressive.
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I take every match as a final. It's very important.
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Once you step on the court, you see the crowd, you see the final, you see I'm here playing another Wimbledon final.
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I think people have this love-hate relationship with tennis. I also feel like that.
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All I want is to win matches, and the ranking sooner or later will come.
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I moved to Spain, and at all the tournaments I'd play, I would be really good in my age. That made me realize that I could be a pro.
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At the end, the one that plays better is going to win.
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Finally a Spanish girl can play on grass.
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When a kid comes next to you, and she's like 'Ooh, one day I want to be like you!' you're like 'Wow, that's so nice to hear!'
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The problem we have in the WTA circuit is that the girls do not have a good relationship because we play against each other, and it's a sport.
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The best players are consistent.
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I learned that if you want something, you've got to really go for it, try to put the nerves aside.
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I have routines but not superstitions.
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My father is Spanish, and he went to Venezuela looking for a job. He was 20 something, and he fell in love with a Venezuelan girl. He owns a company there, producing iron and bronze.
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I go for my shots with no regrets, even if I play to the fence.
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If you want to be one of the best players, everything is hard.
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The tough matches never go my way, so I want to change that.
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It's a great thing to have: that pressure everywhere you go, that responsibility. I think it's good to have it.
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I was about three years old when I started playing in Venezuela with my two older brothers. They're 12 and 11 years older, so I was always the little one.