Greatest thing in life: Winning a tennis match. Second greatest thing in life: Losing a tennis match
I never lost a tennis match, I just ran out of time
Experience is a great advantage. The problem is that when you get the experience, you're too damned old to do anything about it.
Rather than viewing a brief relapse back to inactivity as a failure, treat it as a challenge and try to get back on track as soon as possible.
New Yorkers love it when you spill your guts out there. Spill your guts at Wimbledon and they make you stop and clean it up.
Tennis was never work for me, tennis was fun. And the tougher the battle and the longer the match, the more fun I had.
I hate to lose more than I love to win.
I don't go out there to love my enemy. I go out there to squash him.
There was never anything I wanted to do more than play tennis. Never once walked out there and thought, 'I wish I was doing something else.' Not once.
The minute you think you know everything about tennis is the minute your game starts going down the tubes.
People say I'm around because I have a lot of heart, but I know all the heart in the world couldn't have helped me if I wasn't physically fit.
I've been kicked in the teeth more times in tennis than the law ought to allow.
But why should I read what somebody else thinks of my life when I know the real story?
With everything else that would swirl around me when I got involved in it, tennis was my main concern.
Equality? They ought to play the women's final on opening day. Everybody knows who's going to be in it.
Tennis would be much more exciting if they had pitching machines firing Tennis was given to me to keep me off the street corners of east St. Louis.