INDIAN WELLS, CALIFORNIA
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
QUESTION
How nervous were you, Maria?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Nervous?
QUESTION Yeah.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Why?
QUESTIONThat's a crazy question. I'm not going to ask you a straight question.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Crazy question. I wasn't nervous at all, no. Just -- no.
QUESTION
Not the tiniest little bit?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Not really, no. You mean because of the wind, or...
QUESTION
No, just because it's your first match here. Tennis match, crowd's there.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:
No, I didn't really feel nervous. I've been playing good enough tennis to not be nervous before my first round. Obviously you never know what kind of tennis you're going to produce in these kind of conditions. But, you know, I think against an opponent that didn't give me much rhythm, I think I handled it pretty well.
QUESTION
You'll be happy to know it's pretty calm out there now.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:I'm sure. It's been great the last week, and then I woke up this morning and it's windy all of a sudden. Shocking.
QUESTION
Thinking about your winning streak at all, this nice little streak you have starting the year? MARIA SHARAPOVA:You know, when I begin a tournament it's like I'm starting from scratch. At the end of the day, numbers are all very relative. You know, I just have to focus on my next match and next round. You know, I don't worry about records too much, no.
QUESTION
There was one point in the match - I don't know if you noticed - but in the second set you hit a ball and you thought it might have been good and you challenged it. I don't know if you could see through the umpire's chair, but both your father and Michael went like this, it was out, and you still challenged it. Did you see them?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:
I looked their way, and I did see -- yeah I don't know if that's like challenge or if it's out. But the umpire, you know, sometimes I usually like to ask the umpire, you know, because if they say it was really close, then, you know, you usually challenge it. But she didn't really give me a very confident answer that it was way long, so that's why I challenged it. It was one of those throw-away challenges that, you know, 50 percent of us use.
QUESTIONHave you thought about the Olympics, about playing in them?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Yeah, absolutely.
QUESTION
Do you plan on playing? Because Andy pulled out of it because he thought it was too close to the US Open for him. What are your thoughts about it? And can you excel at both the Open and the Olympics since it's so close together?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:The Olympics comes around only once every four years, and the US Open is there every single year. I don't know if he's played the Olympics before. But, you know, obviously I never have, and it's been a dream of mine ever since I was a little girl. So it's been one of my priorities for a very long time. You know, I'm privileged to be part of so many athletes. You know, I really don't know what to expect, because usually you play the same events every single year. You go from tournament to tournament. I think this will be just completely new and different, and usually you have sort of an idea of what things are going to be like, but I'm really clueless. I'm just -- one of the things I'm really looking forward to is the opening ceremony and walking with all the athletes and, you know, athletes from my country, yeah, in front of thousands of people.
QUESTION
Who there would you like to meet you haven't had the chance to meet before?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:I'd love -- well, I don't know about meeting, but I'd actually love to watch gymnastics or rhythmic gymnastics, because when I was younger I wanted to be a rhythmic gymnast. I don't know if the weeks are the same. What else do I want to watch?
QUESTION
You're intrigued by the ribbon, or which part of rhythmic gymnastics.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Just the art. In Russia, rhythmic gymnastics and figurer skating is an art form, and I was always intrigued by that. I actually did gymnastics for a couple of years when I was younger, about nine or ten. It was part of my fitness regime. But I don't know. I just love, you know, I love ribbons. I used to be like -- in my garage I used to put rollerblades on and that used to be like my figure skates. I used to make a fake ribbon and I'd be rolling around my garage. I'd have my parents pull the car out and have one of those old radios that I'd turn on, one of those really geeky stations, and I'd just be roller blading and waiving the ribbon. I thought I was in the Olympics.
QUESTION
After winning the Australian and you're a contender for a golden slam with the Olympics, have you ever even let yourself think about that yet?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:I'm far away from that. You know, I've only won one Grand Slam this year and I've got many more tournaments -- three more Grand Slams and the Olympics to go. You know, as I said, I want to use these tournaments as good preparation for the Grand Slams, which are obviously the biggest tournaments of the year, and the Olympics including. But you never know what will happen. It will be great if I can, but realistically it's pretty difficult. QUESTIONAre you a fan of Dancing With the Stars?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:No, I actually don't watch it. I don't watch TV very often. Just, I usually -- the only thing I watch usually is the NBA or Sports Center because I hang out with the guys all the time, my team. They're always in sports. So I watch the NBA and hockey a lot.
QUESTION
Do you have any thoughts about them playing an NBA game at this stadium?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Yeah, I heard about that the other day. I think that's awesome, two great teams. That's in October, I think?
QUESTIONYeah.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Where are we in October? Maybe I can join.
QUESTIONSomeone's been getting a lot of mileage about doing imitations of you. Do you think you're going to do imitations of him some day?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Of Novak? QUESTIONYeah.
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Absolutely not. I'd hurt my back doing his imitation, honestly. QUESTIONThat many times?
MARIA SHARAPOVA:Yes. I'm a little fragile when it comes to that.
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