Sharapova Book

marc45

G.O.A.T.
is out

here's the NYT review

Maria Sharapova on Serena Williams: ‘Maybe We’ll Become Friends. Or Not.’


By BEN ROTHENBERG

SEPT. 11, 2017

Maria Sharapova’s first significant breakthrough in professional tennis was her victory over Serena Williams in the 2004 Wimbledon final. In the years since then, the rivalry has been one-sided; Williams has won their last 18 matches.

  • In her new memoir,“Unstoppable: My Life So Far,”Sharapova speaks of Williams in a detailed and often antagonistic way rarely used to discuss an active rival. Plenty of tennis players write autobiographies. Few, if any, write so candidly about a rival before they have played their last match.

    (The book will be released on Tuesday by Sarah Crichton Books. The Times obtained a copy before the release.)

    Though the majority of the book is about her own journey through tennis, starting with her immigration to Florida from Russia at 6, Sharapova details how she has positioned herself against Williams since a young age, and how her childhood impressions of Williams continue to inform her perception of her.

    When Sharapova was 12, Serena and Venus Williams went for an open practice session to the academy in Florida where Sharapova trained. While many gathered to watch, Sharapova did not want to give the sisters the satisfaction of seeing her in the stands — even though they would have had no idea who she was at that point.

    “I’d never put myself in the position of worshiping them, looking up, being a fan,” Sharapova writes.

    Instead, Sharapova’s father found a clandestine spot for her to watch: inside a shed, hidden from view.

    “I could watch through a kind of knothole — just me alone, in the dark, seeing the next 20 years of my life,” she writes. “The image of the Williams sisters would eventually become iconic, and it was in the works even then. They are a force. Tall girls in tennis whites, with bright smiles and piercing, focused eyes.”

    Sharapova next encountered Williams three years later at the 2002 Wimbledon champions’ ball, when she felt compelled to sit as others stood as the champion made her entrance.

    “I wanted to get up, but my body just would not let me,” she writes. “It was as if I were stuck in that chair, staring at Serena through the crowd of people, with a single thought in my head: ‘I am going to get you.’”

    Sharapova first played Williams in Miami in 2004.

    “It was like yes, finally,” she writes. “It felt as if I’d been circling around her for years.”

    Sharapova describes seeing Williams at that moment with much of her same childlike awe.

    “First of all, her physical presence is much stronger and bigger than you realize watching TV,” Sharapova writes. “She has thick arms and thick legs and is so intimidating and strong. And tall, really tall.”

    (Sharapova, at 6-foot-2, is about 5 inches taller than Williams.)

    “I looked across the net, and, no way to get around it, she was just there!” Sharapova continues. “More there than other players, if that makes sense. It’s the whole thing — her presence, her confidence, her personality. She seemed much older than me in Miami. This was just before I turned 17. She was a grown woman, experienced, the best player in the world. It still feels that way. Even now, she can still make me feel like a little girl.”

    Sharapova also used similar language to describe Lindsay Davenport, whom she beat in the 2004 Wimbledon semifinal: “I was overpowered, overmatched. She was a woman. I was a girl. She was big. I was small.”

    But Davenport, against whom Sharapova had a 5-1 record, is not a preoccupying force in her life. Nor is Williams’s sister, Venus, against whom Sharapova is 5-3.

    It is Serena Williams who continues to make Sharapova feel diminished, as she continues to discuss her aura before their 2004 Wimbledon final: “You are a speed bump. You are a zero. Many great players have this mentality. Serena Williams just has it more.”

    Sharapova beat Williams in that match, but believes its aftermath has cost her every match since. Williams, she believes, was determined to crush Sharapova after Sharapova heard her crying in the locker room.

    “Guttural sobs, the sort that make you heave for air, the sort that scares you,” Sharapova writes. “It went on and on. I got out as quickly as I could, but she knew I was there. People often wonder why I have had so much trouble beating Serena; she’s owned me in the past ten years. My record against her is 2 and 19.

    “In analyzing this, people talk about Serena’s strength, her serve and confidence, how her particular game matches up to my particular game, and, sure there is truth to all of that; but, to me, the real answer was there, in this locker room, where I was changing and she was bawling. I think Serena hated me for being the skinny kid who beat her, against all odds, at Wimbledon.”

    Williams’s agent, Jill Smoller, did not respond to a call seeking comment on Monday.

    In contrast to Sharapova, Williams left rivals largely undiscussed in her own midcareer memoir, “On The Line,” published in 2009. There was barely any mention in that book of Justine Henin, who had been Williams’s own chief tormentor through several stretches of her career, including knocking her out of three consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinals events in 2007.

    Sharapova leaves out many turns in their relationship on and off the court, including the 6-1, 6-2 drubbing in the 2007 Australian Open final, which seemed to turn the rivalry in Williams’s favor for good, as well as the 2013 war of wordsbetween the two at Wimbledon punctuated by public shots at each other’s personal lives.

    Sharapova, though, does not hide her fascination with the woman who has defined so much of her career.

    “Serena and I should be friends: we love the same thing, we have the same passion,” she writes. “Only a few people in the world know what we know — what it feels like in the dead center of this storm, the fear and anger that drive you, how it is to win and how it is to lose. But we are not friends — not at all.

    “I think, to some extent, we have driven each other. Maybe that’s better than being friends. Maybe that’s what it takes to fire up the proper fury. Only when you have that intense antagonism can you find the strength to finish her off. But who knows? Someday, when all this is in our past, maybe we’ll become friends. Or not. You never can tell.”
 
Sounds like Masha will play as long as possible to outlast the Sisters as players. We may yet see a beloved old Maria Sharapova on court.

Sent from my Z955A using Tapatalk
 
tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o1_250.gif
tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o2_250.gif

tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o3_250.gif
tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o4_250.gif

tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o5_250.gif
tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o6_250.gif

tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o7_250.gif
tumblr_mdz3msEDH71rv22u7o8_250.gif
 
Pre-ordered one on amazon a while ago and waiting to arrive tomorrow, hopefully will be an inspiration book for my daughter, given all the hurdles that Maria and her dad has come through... Actually I'd read her dad's book, if it existed, with even greater interest, as I guess Yuri's story of going through hell to raise Maria and all that he put on the table are a proof that he is a courageous man and a great father who sacrificed many things in his life to help Masha. I wish I could do the same for my daughter.
 
If anyone ever wondered why she hasn't beaten Serena in 13 years then look no further than this one line...
“I wanted to get up, but my body just would not let me,” she writes. “It was as if I were stuck in that chair, staring at Serena through the crowd of people, with a single thought in my head: ‘I am going to get you.’”
Wow. Talk about being bold.
 
Pre-ordered one on amazon a while ago and waiting to arrive tomorrow, hopefully will be an inspiration book for my daughter, given all the hurdles that Maria and her dad has come through... Actually I'd read her dad's book, if it existed, with even greater interest, as I guess Yuri's story of going through hell to raise Maria and all that he put on the table are a proof that he is a courageous man and a great father who sacrificed many things in his life to help Masha. I wish I could do the same for my daughter.

Yuri is a failed parent, but that is hardly news to anyone who knows his daughter, who is a failed character herself.

Of course, people have the right to read bad books, if they so choose.

:cool:
 
Last edited:
I would just like to take a moment to say, Thank You, Maria Sharapova.

As we know, recently Serena Williams took a leave from the tour in order to start a family. My fear was that after the birth of her child, she may not have the desire nor the motivation to ever return to the tour. Now, I think she may have found a place that will provide her with some motivation. After reading this article, I am pretty confident that Maria Sharapova has provided a great deal of motivation to Serena, if needed, to return to the tour.

Serena may return to the tour on a limited basis i.e., only playing the events that Sharapova has entered in order to "properly respond" to Ms. Sharapova's comments.

Thank you Maria.
Sincerely, Bigserving.
 
is out

here's the NYT review

Maria Sharapova on Serena Williams: ‘Maybe We’ll Become Friends. Or Not.’


By BEN ROTHENBERG

SEPT. 11, 2017

Maria Sharapova’s first significant breakthrough in professional tennis was her victory over Serena Williams in the 2004 Wimbledon final. In the years since then, the rivalry has been one-sided; Williams has won their last 18 matches.

  • In her new memoir,“Unstoppable: My Life So Far,”Sharapova speaks of Williams in a detailed and often antagonistic way rarely used to discuss an active rival. Plenty of tennis players write autobiographies. Few, if any, write so candidly about a rival before they have played their last match.

    (The book will be released on Tuesday by Sarah Crichton Books. The Times obtained a copy before the release.)

    Though the majority of the book is about her own journey through tennis, starting with her immigration to Florida from Russia at 6, Sharapova details how she has positioned herself against Williams since a young age, and how her childhood impressions of Williams continue to inform her perception of her.

    When Sharapova was 12, Serena and Venus Williams went for an open practice session to the academy in Florida where Sharapova trained. While many gathered to watch, Sharapova did not want to give the sisters the satisfaction of seeing her in the stands — even though they would have had no idea who she was at that point.

    “I’d never put myself in the position of worshiping them, looking up, being a fan,” Sharapova writes.

    Instead, Sharapova’s father found a clandestine spot for her to watch: inside a shed, hidden from view.

    “I could watch through a kind of knothole — just me alone, in the dark, seeing the next 20 years of my life,” she writes. “The image of the Williams sisters would eventually become iconic, and it was in the works even then. They are a force. Tall girls in tennis whites, with bright smiles and piercing, focused eyes.”

    Sharapova next encountered Williams three years later at the 2002 Wimbledon champions’ ball, when she felt compelled to sit as others stood as the champion made her entrance.

    “I wanted to get up, but my body just would not let me,” she writes. “It was as if I were stuck in that chair, staring at Serena through the crowd of people, with a single thought in my head: ‘I am going to get you.’”

    Sharapova first played Williams in Miami in 2004.

    “It was like yes, finally,” she writes. “It felt as if I’d been circling around her for years.”

    Sharapova describes seeing Williams at that moment with much of her same childlike awe.

    “First of all, her physical presence is much stronger and bigger than you realize watching TV,” Sharapova writes. “She has thick arms and thick legs and is so intimidating and strong. And tall, really tall.”

    (Sharapova, at 6-foot-2, is about 5 inches taller than Williams.)

    “I looked across the net, and, no way to get around it, she was just there!” Sharapova continues. “More there than other players, if that makes sense. It’s the whole thing — her presence, her confidence, her personality. She seemed much older than me in Miami. This was just before I turned 17. She was a grown woman, experienced, the best player in the world. It still feels that way. Even now, she can still make me feel like a little girl.”

    Sharapova also used similar language to describe Lindsay Davenport, whom she beat in the 2004 Wimbledon semifinal: “I was overpowered, overmatched. She was a woman. I was a girl. She was big. I was small.”

    But Davenport, against whom Sharapova had a 5-1 record, is not a preoccupying force in her life. Nor is Williams’s sister, Venus, against whom Sharapova is 5-3.

    It is Serena Williams who continues to make Sharapova feel diminished, as she continues to discuss her aura before their 2004 Wimbledon final: “You are a speed bump. You are a zero. Many great players have this mentality. Serena Williams just has it more.”

    Sharapova beat Williams in that match, but believes its aftermath has cost her every match since. Williams, she believes, was determined to crush Sharapova after Sharapova heard her crying in the locker room.

    “Guttural sobs, the sort that make you heave for air, the sort that scares you,” Sharapova writes. “It went on and on. I got out as quickly as I could, but she knew I was there. People often wonder why I have had so much trouble beating Serena; she’s owned me in the past ten years. My record against her is 2 and 19.

    “In analyzing this, people talk about Serena’s strength, her serve and confidence, how her particular game matches up to my particular game, and, sure there is truth to all of that; but, to me, the real answer was there, in this locker room, where I was changing and she was bawling. I think Serena hated me for being the skinny kid who beat her, against all odds, at Wimbledon.”

    Williams’s agent, Jill Smoller, did not respond to a call seeking comment on Monday.

    In contrast to Sharapova, Williams left rivals largely undiscussed in her own midcareer memoir, “On The Line,” published in 2009. There was barely any mention in that book of Justine Henin, who had been Williams’s own chief tormentor through several stretches of her career, including knocking her out of three consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinals events in 2007.

    Sharapova leaves out many turns in their relationship on and off the court, including the 6-1, 6-2 drubbing in the 2007 Australian Open final, which seemed to turn the rivalry in Williams’s favor for good, as well as the 2013 war of wordsbetween the two at Wimbledon punctuated by public shots at each other’s personal lives.

    Sharapova, though, does not hide her fascination with the woman who has defined so much of her career.

    “Serena and I should be friends: we love the same thing, we have the same passion,” she writes. “Only a few people in the world know what we know — what it feels like in the dead center of this storm, the fear and anger that drive you, how it is to win and how it is to lose. But we are not friends — not at all.

    “I think, to some extent, we have driven each other. Maybe that’s better than being friends. Maybe that’s what it takes to fire up the proper fury. Only when you have that intense antagonism can you find the strength to finish her off. But who knows? Someday, when all this is in our past, maybe we’ll become friends. Or not. You never can tell.”

Thanks for posting this. Are you going to buy the book?

Pre-ordered one on amazon a while ago and waiting to arrive tomorrow, hopefully will be an inspiration book for my daughter, given all the hurdles that Maria and her dad has come through... Actually I'd read her dad's book, if it existed, with even greater interest, as I guess Yuri's story of going through hell to raise Maria and all that he put on the table are a proof that he is a courageous man and a great father who sacrificed many things in his life to help Masha. I wish I could do the same for my daughter.

Agree, Yuri's story would be fascinating. He sacrificed a lot but in my opinion he is anti-hero. There is a lot of selfishness and vicariousness in raising children the way he did. Many people were wronged along the way, but in the end, he emerged victorious. It is absolute classic "Coming to America" story as we view it in Europe.

Can you post what you think of the book when you have read it?

If anyone ever wondered why she hasn't beaten Serena in 13 years then look no further than this one line...

Wow. Talk about being bold.

Agree
 
Thanks for posting this. Are you going to buy the book?



Agree, Yuri's story would be fascinating. He sacrificed a lot but in my opinion he is anti-hero. There is a lot of selfishness and vicariousness in raising children the way he did. Many people were wronged along the way, but in the end, he emerged victorious. It is absolute classic "Coming to America" story as we view it in Europe.

Can you post what you think of the book when you have read it?



Agree

sure.....and no...waiting for Annacone book to arrive...I skipped Johnny Mac's new one too, but just want to see what Annacone has to say about Sampras and Fed, and Henman...and the current scene...hopefully some behind the scenes stuff that isn't already out there
 
sure.....and no...waiting for Annacone book to arrive...I skipped Johnny Mac's new one too, but just want to see what Annacone has to say about Sampras and Fed, and Henman...and the current scene...hopefully some behind the scenes stuff that isn't already out there

I'm getting the Annacone book for sure. When you look at what this guy has done it's quite incredible. Annacone does the thankless task of getting people who are already good and getting that last 1%. In a lot of ways it's the hardest part to do, getting a good player to become great. People don't give him enough credit because he works with people who are already amazingly talented. But his skills in the tactical and mental side of things are incredible imo.

I'll probably still pick up the Sharapova book but only if I can find a copy cheap in E-Book format. I don't need a physical copy because I don't care for the jacket design or the typesetting (from the previews I've seen).
 
I don't like Maria Sharapova a bit. Having said so and since I'm obviously not buying the book, could the buyers please let me know why in the world she started a candy company and if there are any insights into her ridiculous screaming. Finally, why in the world she represents Russia, when she is fundamentally American from every possible angle.
 
I would just like to take a moment to say, Thank You, Maria Sharapova.

As we know, recently Serena Williams took a leave from the tour in order to start a family. My fear was that after the birth of her child, she may not have the desire nor the motivation to ever return to the tour. Now, I think she may have found a place that will provide her with some motivation. After reading this article, I am pretty confident that Maria Sharapova has provided a great deal of motivation to Serena, if needed, to return to the tour.

Serena may return to the tour on a limited basis i.e., only playing the events that Sharapova has entered in order to "properly respond" to Ms. Sharapova's comments.

Thank you Maria.
Sincerely, Bigserving.
SErena is on another planet to Sharapova. Sharapova is trying to make out theor was a rivalry. There wasnt as serena so much better
 
Congrats to Sugarpova. Sounds like a great book. Will probably outsell Serena' s 10:1.
Sharapova wrote this book just to bump her wealth above Serena's Well, it won't work! Serena will leapfrog her when she marries her rich techie. Poor Masha just has to settle for being Mr. Lob's sidepiece ;)

My wife wants to read the book. She heard that Maria dishes all kinds of dirt :)
 
Isn't that the way capitalism is supposed to work?

Obama is getting 60 million for his tell-nothing memoir.

Your inference that women like to create and consume 'dirt' is the usual misogyny.
Sharapova wrote this book just to bump her wealth above Serena's Well, it won't work! Serena will leapfrog her when she marries her rich techie. Poor Masha just has to settle for being Mr. Lob's sidepiece ;)

My wife wants to read the book. She heard that Maria dishes all kinds of dirt :)
 
Last edited:
She was born in Russia to Russian parents, so she is not 'fundamentally American from every possible angle'.
I don't like Maria Sharapova a bit. Having said so and since I'm obviously not buying the book, could the buyers please let me know why in the world she started a candy company and if there are any insights into her ridiculous screaming. Finally, why in the world she represents Russia, when she is fundamentally American from every possible angle.
 
Sharapova wrote this book just to bump her wealth above Serena's Well, it won't work! Serena will leapfrog her when she marries her rich techie. Poor Masha just has to settle for being Mr. Lob's sidepiece ;)

My wife wants to read the book. She heard that Maria dishes all kinds of dirt :)

Get it from the library, if you must.
 
Ugh I can't stand Maria Sharapova. I'm not crazy about Serena and her antics, but at least she's not malicious. Who writes about their competitors this way and your father had you hide in a shed to watch them, instead of coming out and saying hello and watch them like all the other normal kids did? What kind of freak is Yuri and this is why I believe he is the reason she is messed up in the head for life. She didn't want to worship them but her game was patterned after Venus', which she admitted to in an early Wimbledon interview and she posted this on Facebook after beating injured Serena in a 2004 World Tour Final match:

Here's the great dinner I had at Spago to celebrate beating Serena Williams for the second time in a row (remember Wimbledon last summer?).

She got your memo and she didn't like the way you conducted yourself, and how you seemed to make it personal. You like to boast but you're not her rival and you're not as talented as her, so get that through your thick skull. After writing this book, you will never beat her again.
 
Serena always seems to bring a little extra for Maria to anyone else. I really think since 2004 there is nobody she would hate losing to more than Maria. And comments like the above and what we see in this book explain why. Playing Serena is hard enough to begin with, particularly when in addition to her bieng superior to you (as she is to everyone) you happen to have that horrible tennis situation of her being a real "bad match up" for you, but Maria took it upon herself to make an already difficult situation far worse.
 
Why are you so upset, darling, and what question are you asking exactly?

(I forgot to mention you bought into the 'women marry rich husbands' line as well.

You really are a very old-fashioned sort of guy).
WTF is wrong with you? Seriously! :confused:
 
Yuri is a failed parent, but that is hardly news to anyone who knows his daughter, who is a failed character herself.

The guy busted his rear to get his daughter where she is now (a world-famous, 5-times Slam champion multi-millionaire). My friend knew him in Beijing where he was traveling to make some money for Maria's training. Failed parent? You are a joke.

Finally, why in the world she represents Russia, when she is fundamentally American from every possible angle.

Because she is, ahem, Russian? Born in Russia to Russian parents.

The question should be, why Moscow-born Mischa Zverev who speaks English like a native language is representing Germany ;)
 
Why are you so upset, darling, and what question are you asking exactly?

(I forgot to mention you bought into the 'women marry rich husbands' line as well.

You really are a very old-fashioned sort of guy).
You don't recognize trolling when you see it?

And you don't know me at all. LOL.

And why drag Obama into it? So. Weird.
 
Why are you so upset, darling, and what question are you asking exactly?

(I forgot to mention you bought into the 'women marry rich husbands' line as well.

You really are a very old-fashioned sort of guy).

Sounds like you've had a bad day. Chill. Drink your vodka comrade. Tomorrow is a new day.
 
Why would your trolling be self-evident?

You could have clarified the matter with your 'WTF' post, but you didn't.

I dragged the big money that is paid for memoirs into it.
You don't recognize trolling when you see it?

And you don't know me at all. LOL.

And why drag Obama into it? So. Weird.
 
Last edited:
I don't like Maria Sharapova a bit. Having said so and since I'm obviously not buying the book, could the buyers please let me know why in the world she started a candy company and if there are any insights into her ridiculous screaming. Finally, why in the world she represents Russia, when she is fundamentally American from every possible angle.

Her representation as Russian is baffling to me, too, tbh. I thought she would have taken the Navratilova route eons ago.

Is it as Interesting as Lance Armstrong's book?

It should have been called "Unstoppable with Meldonium".

Having now read an excerpt of the book in preview (I bought an eBook copy today) I can say honestly that this is as interesting as Armstrong's book. Just as explosive but hopefully, in contrast with Armstrong's work, actually true.

Sharapova wrote this book just to bump her wealth above Serena's Well, it won't work! Serena will leapfrog her when she marries her rich techie. Poor Masha just has to settle for being Mr. Lob's sidepiece ;)

My wife wants to read the book. She heard that Maria dishes all kinds of dirt :)

A lot of inside information is included in the book. The sanctity and discretion of "what happens in the locker room stays in the locker room" is violated several times :eek: The biggest thing to me is I always thought Serena was far more motivated by the rivalry than Sharapova was but it seems it has loomed very large in Maria's life this whole time. She talks about it in shockingly vivid details and appears to have gone to great pains to play bizarre and very petty mind games with Serena throughout their careers. the mind games are listed in the book :mad:

Did she mention me in her book?

Not all of Maria's lovers are catalogued in the book.

Also when Sharapova writes about Serena in order to sell her book, there's that.

Agree

The guy busted his rear to get his daughter where she is now (a world-famous, 5-times Slam champion multi-millionaire). My friend knew him in Beijing where he was traveling to make some money for Maria's training. Failed parent? You are a joke.

What was he doing in Beijing? I must confess that his personality and visual presence was always magnified in Maria's early days, but his actual day job remained a mystery.......
 
Last edited:
My wife asked me what I was so distracted with and I showed her what I wrote. She said "No, I didn't want to read it for the dirt. I wanted to read it because the reviewer said she is totally honest anout what a **** she is and doesn't even try to hide it!" Lol. Sorry I misrepresented her. I guess I'm more into the dirt, but I figured I would get all the goodies here.
 
Sharapova wrote this book just to bump her wealth above Serena's Well, it won't work! Serena will leapfrog her when she marries her rich techie. Poor Masha just has to settle for being Mr. Lob's sidepiece ;)

My wife wants to read the book. She heard that Maria dishes all kinds of dirt :)
What dirt? Serena shaded her years ago in Rolling Stones saying she doesn't go to the cool parties. Can't get dirt when you aren't invited to the parties ;)

The iconic quote from Rolling Stones
"She (being Maria) begins every interview by saying: “I’m so happy. I’m so lucky” ’.
Serena said it was ‘so boring’, adding: ‘She’s still not going to be invited to the cool parties. And, hey, if she wants to be with the guy with a black heart, go for it.’
 
What dirt? Serena shaded her years ago in Rolling Stones saying she doesn't go to the cool parties. Can't get dirt when you aren't invited to the parties ;)

The iconic quote from Rolling Stones
Oh come on now. Serena didn't even intend for that to be published. The reporter was eavesdropping on her phone conversation with Venus. Maria is dishing up goodies on purpose and I want to see them (for free in here when other people quote them; or if my wife buys it amd tells me about it).
 
Oh come on now. Serena didn't even intend for that to be published. The reporter was eavesdropping on her phone conversation with Venus. Maria is dishing up goodies on purpose and I want to see them (for free in here when other people quote them; or if my wife buys it amd tells me about it).
Hey i'm only messing! You know I love Serena ;) Sharapova did bite back good anyway though ;)
"If she wants to talk about something personal, maybe she should talk about her relationship and her boyfriend that was married and is getting a divorce and has kids."


Anyway, I can't see there being that much juicy stuff in the book to be honest. Think she's milked this Serena angle for all it's worth. I hope i'm wrong and we get some drama but just can't see it.
 
Back
Top