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Izvan i iza turnira

Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby NadjaM » 08 Jul 2011, 00:34

Jbt,jel' to Cibulja :krsti:

Ko je ne zna skupo bi je platio :lollol:
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Goca_64 » 08 Jul 2011, 00:46

Ona je :laugh:
Ko li je sledeci posle Melcera i Monfa :roll: ?
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby AirBall » 08 Jul 2011, 00:47

Goca_64 wrote:Ona je :laugh:
Ko li je sledeci posle Melcera i Monfa :roll: ?


Lepi Rade kao poslednja stanica... :lollol:
Кад неправда постане закон, отпор постаје обавеза
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Gama » 09 Jul 2011, 13:25

I Petra imala docek :biggrin:
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Petra Kvitova will take a few days of rest following her Wimbledon title run. The 21-year-old Czech was playing Wimbledon on painkillers and now she's decided to skip next week's NURNBERGER Gastein Ladies in Austria to fully recover.

Kvitova was supposed to be top seed at the $220,000 event and Julia Goerges will now take that place.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Gama » 09 Jul 2011, 13:46

Bas je sarmantno bugarce
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Gama » 09 Jul 2011, 13:59

Ipak operisan. Tako mlad a vec pod noz :crybaby:
Raonic has Hip Surgery
July 7, 2011
Canadian ace Milos Raonic underwent hip surgery in Colorado on Tuesday, and will likely miss the upcoming Rogers Cup in Montreal. The 20-year-old injured his hip during the second-round of Wimbledon.
Raonic, who is currently ranked No. 26 in the world, hasn’t officially pulled out of any upcoming event.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby M.S. » 09 Jul 2011, 14:15

koliko beše-najmanje 6 nedelja? verujem da je to optimističko predviđanje. šteta. ali je prevelik i pretežak za današnji tenis.

Dimitrov je već dosta omiljen među ženama i gay populacijom, što se lako može načuti i na ovom snimku. jest šarmantan, ali neka hvala.
Najbolji je režim za sve ljude. Najgori su ljudi za sve režime.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Milutinov Tata » 09 Jul 2011, 15:53

Milos Raonic (Thornhill, ON) has successfully undergone hip surgery on July 5 in Vail, Colorado, and is expected to make a full recovery.

Raonic is already back riding the stationary bike. He looks to be back on the courts hitting in the next six weeks and ready for competition at some point thereafter.



Steta za Montreal, sada ce sigurno pasti tenzije oko turnira. Valjda ce bar da se pojavi na US Openu i biti spreman za jesenju sezonu, to mu je sansa da nakupi jos neke bodove. Mada mozda i nije lose da ispadne iz prvih 30, pa da nema obavezne turnire sledece godine.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Milutinov Tata » 09 Jul 2011, 16:13

Agasi u kuci slavnih

Spoiler: pokaži
NEWPORT, R.I. - Walk through the museum at the International Tennis Hall of Fame, past the walls of wooden rackets with their yellowing, natural gut strings, past the pictures of women in full-length dresses and men in pressed white slacks, and you come to the room honouring new inductee Andre Agassi.

Suddenly, everything goes from black and white to Technicolor.

The blue denim shorts are there, beneath pictures of Agassi with a goatee and a purple bandanna. There is a shot of him as a towheaded nine-year-old meeting Bjorn Borg, and others with the flowing, highlighted hair that twice shocked the tennis world. In a Plexiglas case, treated with the reverence usually reserved for crystal bowls and silver trophies, is a pair of autographed hair clippers Agassi used to switch to the stubble-headed look he still sports today.

"What I hope is that I brought in that tent, I opened the sport up to people who might otherwise not have been interested," Agassi said in an interview with The Associated Press on Friday. "I hope I brought people to the game. I hope I inspired kids who are out there now doing it better than I ever did it."

An eight-time Grand Slam champion and Olympic gold medallist who was the No. 1 player in the world for 101 straight weeks, Agassi will be inducted into the Hall of Fame on Saturday along with former WTA executive Fern "Peachy" Kellmeyer. Agassi joins wife Steffi Graf, who was inducted into the Hall in 2004, and dozens of men with handlebar moustaches who would, frankly, be shocked at his inclusion among them.

"I think they would get shocked at the state of the world all the way around — including me being in the Hall of Fame," Agassi corrected, with a laugh. "I had, certainly, a rebellion in me. But different than that, I had a fundamental belief that, 'What's wrong with this? There's nothing wrong with this.' If anything, I saw that some people liked it, that people were getting interested."

If John McEnroe shook up the gentlemanly game with his cursing and his combative behaviour, Agassi injected it with a sense of style. Refreshing to some, subversive to others, Agassi jolted the tennis world with the way he dressed, the way he talked, and the way he played.

As is often the case in matters of style, it wasn't for everyone.

"When I wore jean shorts on the tennis court, a lot of people said, 'It's the wrong thing to do,'" Agassi said in the Hall's Woolard Library, a dark-panelled room next to his exhibit that is decorated with sepia portraits and a marble bust. "I had a fundamental belief that it's going to have an ability to impact more people, to bring people in. It's going to do good. I think it make people identify with tennis players more profoundly. In all ways, I tried to leave the game better off, and will continue to do so."

Wearing a black T-shirt, faded and frayed jeans and black boots, Agassi explored the artifacts from a career that took him from child prodigy to the No. 1 singles player in the world. With his powerful groundstrokes from both sides, Agassi won 60 tournaments, including each of the Grand Slam events. He was a member of two U.S. Davis Cup-winning teams, and he won the Olympic gold medal in Atlanta in 1996.

After dropping to No. 141 in the world, Agassi returned to have perhaps one of his most productive years in 1999, winning his second U.S. Open, finishing second at Wimbledon and winning his only French Open to complete the career Grand Slam. The women's winner in Paris that year was Graf, and the two were married a couple of years later. (Agassi's first marriage, to actress Brooke Shields, lasted less than two years.)

Now 40, Agassi remains fourth on tennis' all-time money list, with more than $30 million in earnings, and he took in millions more with endorsements that both played off and enhanced his rebellious image while making him the most popular player of his generation.

"I was surprised by every victory I ever had on the tennis court. So this moment is surprising to me," Agassi said. "As a whole, it's just overwhelming. To be standing alongside some of the others that are here, it's a big moment."

Almost as surprising as Agassi's career was his 2009 book "Open," in which he revealed that he used crystal meth — and talked his way out of a failed drug test — and that he grew to hate the sport he was pushed into by his father. Agassi criticized several opponents, but the most talked-about news was that the flowing locks that were so much a part of his early image were enhanced by a toupee to counteract premature baldness.

Describing his legacy as "falling from grace, hitting rock bottom and figuring out a way to do it all over again," Agassi now devotes his time to his foundation. He has raised US$150 million to reform public education, opening a tuition-free public charter school in an at-risk Las Vegas neighbourhood; he is at work on another in Pennsylvania.

"The body of work, and all those hours, all those detours, the trials and tribulations, the wins and the losses — for it all to equal this is overwhelming to me," he said. "I don't know how it's different than anybody else that's in here. But I know it was my journey."


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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Dejan » 09 Jul 2011, 21:53

Andre Agassi's triumphs are his own

The other-directed person wants to be loved rather than esteemed.
--David Riesman, author, The Lonely Crowd


There has always been a degree of honesty to Andre Agassi that is as engaging as it is disarming. Tennis fans saw him transform from a boy to man, tennis' elder statesman. Few skeletons could emerge from his closet when he is inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame on July 9 as no tennis player in history has been more dissected or has been more willing to be explored. It is only fitting that his autobiography is titled "Open."

Three years after turning pro, Andre Agassi finished the Volvo International in 1988 as the No. 3 ranked player in the world.
For a man who made millions in a one-on-one form of competition, Agassi possesses a rare empathy. He began life and conducted much of his tennis career as more of a lover than fighter, less attuned to the pursuit of victory and more disposed to pleasing others. In one sense, Agassi is a survivor and a student. In another, he is a chameleon, shaping himself along the contours of those who most strongly exert their gravitational pull.

Can you blame him? If certain aspects of Agassi's nature led him to hit a tennis ball extremely well, nurture took leave amid the dictatorial reign of Agassi's father, Mike -- the driven immigrant who turned tennis from a wholesome activity into what Andre has often described as forced labor. To placate Mike, young Andre complied. Thus, lesson one in the art of pleasing others. Only upon victory was the boy given a few crumbs of acknowledgment.

By 13 years old, Agassi was shipped off to what he regarded as yet another Gulag, the Nick Bollettieri Tennis Academy. But while if at some level Agassi rebelled against the life of a tennis prodigy by trying new hairdos, painting his nails and even engaging in seemingly rebellious acts, he was compliant in carrying out his sentence.

Whether he cared to or not, Agassi was indeed on his way to a pro career. And though Bollettieri -- an ex-Marine who regarded himself as a lord of discipline -- sought to harness Agassi, once it was clear the boy was a star, Bollettieri and Agassi grabbed tennis by the throat. Colorful shirts, denim shorts and enough glitzy ad contracts to make a race car driver envious.

In the orbit of Bollettieri and other handlers, Agassi let himself be deployed in a way that was lucrative, despite it being cynical in its artifice -- all perhaps in the name of acquiring the affection from the suntanned and hearty Bollettieri that no one else could provide. If the price of love was a few ad campaigns, so be it. Rip the ball and let the chips fall where they may.

Fortunately Agassi, circa 1989-90, commenced an engagement with the man who became the central figure in his journey toward authenticity. Gil Reyes assumed the roles of trainer, security man, buddy, spiritual adviser and de facto father-brother.

In mythical terms, he is the Obi Wan Kenobi to Agassi's Luke Skywalker, as it was Reyes who kept Agassi balanced, focused and attuned. Trust your feelings. Use the force. No person has been near and dear to Agassi longer (even Perry Rogers, his best friend from childhood, vanished from Team Agassi in 2008 in the wake of a lawsuit and conflict that will likely never be cogently articulated).

So to restate the question: Has Agassi always been wise enough to find what he needs or is he some sort of cult follower, attaching himself to the apron strings and verbal constructs of his latest guru?

His 1994 union with tactical-coaching genius Brad Gilbert was an inspired hookup. No longer was Agassi simply a ball striker unleashed. Where once it had been Bollettieri cruising the periphery of the practice court urging Agassi to keep striking big, Gilbert entered Agassi into an interactive tennis seminary.


Though during this time Agassi continued his relationship with Nike, what he wore rapidly took a back seat to his new-and-improved tactical mind. He and Gilbert would commence hitting and in due time, but at first Agassi began to ape Gilbert's talk-radio patter with seasoned and clever staccato-like comments about 97 mph kick serves; how to hurt guys; and, of course, Gilbert's trademark phrase, "winning ugly." Small wonder that Agassi referred to a five-set win at the U.S. Open over Michael Chang as "my bar mitzvah in tennis, the match that made me a man."

All along there was Reyes, carefully honing Agassi's frame, but even more, shaping his heart, truly blossoming as his "bodyguard." Through the '90s, as Agassi's commitment to the sport floundered, Reyes stood loyally in his corner. Fitting also that Agassi and Reyes referred to his turnaround win at the '99 French Open as the day they at last slew the dragon.

From colorful ad campaigns to religious rituals to mythical creatures, Agassi was the biggest box-office star in the history of tennis, a magnet for the camera, the microphone and the notepad.

Steffi Graf made her way into tennis history in precisely the opposite way Agassi has. She enjoyed an epic career of conquest built on the dedication of a monk, ceaseless performance and a near Garbo-esque resistance to interviews, profiles and ad campaigns. Although Agassi hailed from the desert city, Graf was the real creature of the sand: a sphinx, a powerful monument and testimony to diligence that is concurrently compelling and unknowable.

Andre Agassi made a fashion statement out of his long hair and denim shorts.
As so many had, she too shaped Agassi. As their romance blossomed and they eventually married in 2001, Agassi took on many of Graf's understated qualities. His clothes became increasingly muted in color. He became increasingly business-like in his approach to matches, utterly no-nonsense in everything from the arrangement of his courtside chair to interactions with officials to the simple and powerful construction of points with exquisite discipline to the point of, believe it or not, craftsmanship bordering on deliberate boredom -- a galaxy away from the neon-attired shot-maker from the Bollettieri era.

The truth is Agassi's triumphs are his own.

Andre Agassi has built his legacy in the way that makes sports such a genuine form of meritocracy: performance. Still, is it possible to know a man who has covered so much territory as Andre Agassi?

Perhaps the fact that we think we can understand him any place beyond the lines proves both the power and the limits of contemporary celebrity.

Joel Drucker is based in Oakland, Calif., and writes for Tennis Magazine and Tennis Channel.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Gama » 10 Jul 2011, 00:13

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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Milutinov Tata » 10 Jul 2011, 23:33

Ne mogu se oteti utisku da je u sustini nekako njegova karijera kao i Lendlova, uradili su manje nego sto su mogli. Veliki igrac koji je imao obracune sa Mekom, Lendlom i Vilanderom, bio najveci rival sa Samprasom, a u smiraj karijere izlazio na megdan sa Federerom i Nadalom. Most izmedju najvecih igraca ove igre.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Dejan » 11 Jul 2011, 15:34

Agasijev govor povodom ulaska u kuću slavnih:

AGASSI'S HALL OF FAME INDUCTION SPEECH

Spoiler: pokaži
Eight-time Grand Slam singles champion Andre Agassi was inducted into the International Tennis Hall Of Fame on Saturday in Newport, Rhode Island. Here is the full transcript of his speech:

I've stood at this podium twice before. Once was to introduce my beautiful wife, Stephanie Graf. I was so much more comfortable that day because I felt the recipient to be far more worthy. The second time was in my father's imagination (laughter), in his mind's eye. From the day I was born, my father Mike saw this day in my future and described it to me many times.

Agassi Inducted Into Hall Of Fame

So my feeling of déjà vu right now almost rivals my feeling of gratitude. Almost.

You know, not long ago I was giving a talk in my home town of Las Vegas, and after I spoke there was this answer and question period. The first hand up, first questions out of the box, was a man in the front row. You could see in this man's face that he was really struggling with something. He took the microphone, stood up and asked, "How do you know when to stop telling your kids what to do?" The questioner was my father.

I was caught off guard that night. I didn't know what to say. I don't remember what I did say. But the answer has come to me now so clearly. Dad, when I was five, you told me to win Wimbledon; when I was seven, you told me to win all of the four Grand Slams; and more times that I can remember you told me to get into the Hall of Fame. And when I was 29, I don't know if you remember this, you told me to marry Steffi Graf. Best order you ever gave me. So Dad, please don't ever stop telling me what to do.

If we're lucky in life, we get a handful of moments when we don't have to wonder if we made a parent proud. We don't have to ask them; we just know. I want to thank tennis for giving me one of those moments today. It's one of the many things for which I need to thank this sport.

I look at Simone and the thousands of young people she represents at Agassi Prep, and I say under my breath, "thank you, tennis". I look at my wife and my children who I live for, and I say, "thank you, tennis". I look to the future, my efforts to build high performing charter schools in inner cities across the U.S., schools that will impact tens of thousands of Simones, and I say, "thank you, tennis", for making that possible.

I fell in love with tennis far too late in my life, but the reason that I have everything that I hold dear is because of how much tennis has loved me back. I'm thrilled, humbled, quite terrified to be honest to stand in front of you right now. I've felt vulnerable on the tennis court many times but not quite like today. I've grown up in front of you. You've seen my highs, my lows. We've laughed together, we've cried together. But what is so clear to me standing here today is that you have given me compassion, understanding, love, more than I expected, many times more than I deserved.

Tennis has not only given me much, it has taught me much. It's no accident that tennis uses the language of life, service, advantage, break, fault, love; the lessons of tennis are the lessons of maturity. In tennis you prepare and you prepare, and then one day your preparation seems futile; nothing is working, and the other guy has got your number cold. So you improvise. In tennis you learn what I do instantly affects what you do and vice versa. Tennis makes you perceptive, proactive, reactive all at the same time. Tennis teaches you the subtlety of human interaction, the curse and blessing of cause and effect.

After you play tennis for a living, you never forget that we are all connected, and there's nothing quite like a tiebreak that teaches you the concept of high risk, high reward. Tennis teaches you there's no such thing as perfect. You want to be perfect, you hope to be perfect, then you're out there and you're far less than perfect. And you realize, I don't really have to be perfect today, I just have to be better than one person. It's true. All you club players remember that, okay?

Tennis is a lonely sport, probably the most lonely. You're out there with no team, no coach and no place to hide. That's why tennis players not only talk to themselves but answer. And yet all that loneliness eventually teaches you to stand alone. The high standards that tennis imposes on us, the self reliance it demands of us, that's the reason why tennis has produced so many of life's great game changers.

One of the landmarks of our sport, our National Tennis Center in New York, is home to the Arthur Ashe Stadium. What courage Arthur showed; how fair he was while being treated so unfairly. Once Arthur grabbed hold of a truth, he was unwilling, not capable, of letting go. Tennis gave us that man. He was and is a treasure, not just for America but for the whole world, for those who have yet to be born.

The tennis center itself is the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center named after one of my personal heroes. Think of the seismic transformation Billie caused in society. Our wives, daughters, mothers, have more than a hope for equality; they have a mandated claim on it because of Billie. She did so much more than just inspire women; she changed the way men and women think about men and women, the way we all think about equality. She woke us up. Tennis gave us Billie, and tennis today is giving me the chance to say, "thank you, Billie".

Tennis gave me all my personal teachers that I owe a debt I can never repay. They lifted me up and carried me across many finish lines, sometimes literally. My dad Mike and my mom Betty; my big brother Phil; my friend, protector and trainer Gil Reyes; my coaches, Nick Bollettieri, Darren Cahill, Brad Gilbert; and the person who means more to me than words can express, the woman who still takes my breath away every day, Stephanie Graf.

Each one of them deserves a separate Hall of Fame speech, but of course there isn't time. So I've written a letter to each one of them, intimate letters, love letters, but they're not private. I want the world to know how I feel, so I'm putting them on my foundation's website where I hope they'll serve as a permanent public tribute to those who made this day a reality. They're the ones who made possible the highlights. They're the reasons I am blessed with magical memories that help me sleep, sometimes keep me awake.

Because of my father I have the memory of the '92 Wimbledon and the '96 Olympics and some thrilling Davis Cups. Because of Gil I have the memory of the '99 French Open, his ear to ear smile in the fifth set when we both thought my tank was empty but there was a few drops of fuel left. Because of Stephanie and my children, Jaden and Jaz, there was that day of my retirement in 2006 when I got to walk away from the sport on my own terms. They were there for me that day ready to embrace the future, whatever that might be. These are my people, and these memories are seared in my mind forever.

One of the most influential people in my life I met only one time. It was the most vulnerable time, a time that I needed direction and inspiration, and just then, there I was, shaking hands with Nelson Mandela. He took my hand, complimented my game, and in the same breath told me the reason why we have been put here on earth. I can still close my eyes and hear his words of wisdom from that evening. He said, "We must be careful in our decisions, careful in our words, and we must be careful in our relationships. Andre, we must live our life carefully." Once you hear those words from Nelson Mandela, you can never un hear them.

I didn't always live carefully. I didn't always pay tennis the respect it deserved. I thought it was my career that was creating my angst, that tennis was the cause of my internal tension and disconnect. I didn't know myself, and I didn't recognize that my troubles were of my own making and that I and only I could solve them.

Only after being broken, another tennis term, did I realize I wasn't being careful. But you know, rock bottom is an interesting place. I moved in and spent some time there. It's actually not a bad place. It's a place where you get to ask, who do I want to be; am I ready to take ownership of my life. For me, ownership meant growing up, focusing every day on being just one day better. Ownership meant not only embracing tennis but celebrating it. Ownership meant going back to the Challenger circuit, feeling honored to be my own ballboy, feeling privileged to flip my own scorecard. Ownership meant feeling grateful for being and having the chance to start over. Climbing out of that hole that I had dug for myself, that's when I started choosing to believe that each of us have a plan for our life, a purpose to fulfill, a body of work to create, a reason to be.

I committed to taking care of myself and taking care of my tennis. Going from a ranking of 141 in the world back to No. 1 was not an accomplishment; it was the reflection of an accomplishment. It was the symptom of good choices; it was the result of being careful.

The highlights I experienced taught me what is possible. The hard times reinforce the consequences of me not being true to my character, of not living up to my expectations.These things have coalesced inside of me into a kind of code, a personal mission statement I believe we have a responsibility to each other, a responsibility to create more than we consume, a responsibility to build things that will outlast us, a responsibility to find our own limits and push through them.

Even when life's challenges weigh us down, make us unrecognizable to ourselves, we can always begin again. There's always time to thrive. It's not too late to be inspired. It's not too late to change. It's not too late.

This honor today leaves me deeply humbled but also makes me think of others who don't get their due: Teachers, nurses, caregivers, struggling parents, all the people who do the right thing who win their own private Grand Slams. They know already. They know already what took me decades to figure out: That we are here to do good quietly, to shine in secret, to give when there's no crowd applauding, to give of ourselves to someone who can offer us nothing.

Tennis gave me the chance to meet so many of these people, to travel the world and visit places where the human spirit shines brightest because life is darkest. Tennis taught me that the needs of this world are great but they are no match, nor will they ever be a match, for the human spirit.

So thank you, tennis, for my life. Thank you, tennis, for my wife. And thank you, tennis, for enabling me to find my life's work.

In closing, to my son Jaden, my daughter Jaz, and every young person listening to my voice, the world that we're leaving you is not the world we wish for you. You need to make that world, to go places we've never been, to succeed in ways we've never dreamed. Mandela said to me, "There is difficulty in all human journeys, but there is no ability in just being a journeyer." From him I learned every journey is epic, every journey is important, every journey begins today.

At the beginning of my journey, my friend Gil said to me, "Andre, you have dreams and I have strong shoulders, so stand on my shoulders and reach." To my children, to all of our children, stand on our shoulders, reach higher than we could, reach for your dreams, because today standing here receiving this honor, I am living proof that no dream, no journey is impossible.

Thank you.
...riječi su isto kao i gomile ljudi, nije nužno znati za sve, odaberi za sebe samo one prave...
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Gama » 14 Jul 2011, 13:46

Rafael Nadal wins the ESPY Award for Best Male Tennis Player. Novak Djokovic & Roger Federer also nominated.
Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams won Best Male and Best Female Tennis Player, respectively.
Dirk Nowitzki won Best Male Athlete- Rafa je i u ovoj kategoriji bio nominovan.
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Re: Izvan i iza turnira

Postby Saint-Tropez » 14 Jul 2011, 15:29

Gama wrote:
Rafael Nadal wins the ESPY Award for Best Male Tennis Player. Novak Djokovic & Roger Federer also nominated.
Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams won Best Male and Best Female Tennis Player, respectively.
Dirk Nowitzki won Best Male Athlete- Rafa je i u ovoj kategoriji bio nominovan.


Zanima me koji je tacno bio kriterijum po kom su Serenu proglasili najboljom teniserkom kad ona nije igrala godinu dana? :huh: :unsure:
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