Top 102 Quotes & Sayings by Mardy Fish - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American tennis player Mardy Fish.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
I played as many golf tournaments as I could. I killed time by playing and practicing. It's something I love to do; it's fun and I was good at it.
The sport, my job, was taken from me so abruptly that it took me a long time to get my life back.
Some days are better than others, some weeks are better than others.
I'm pretty lucky. I know I'm really good at what I do, and it's fun for me.
For the first three months after the U.S. Open, I had retired and nonretired in my head almost every week. And there was a while where I was done. I had gotten it through my head that I was done, when I was just trying to get my normal life back.
Try to do some cool things while you can because it's not going to last too long.
With my anxiety, I essentially need to be around someone at all times.
I had a really great career. I have won over 300 matches, won a bunch of tournaments, almost won a bunch of big tournaments, beaten a lot of good players and done more things than I ever could have imagined.
I'm obviously struggling to go out on my own terms. — © Mardy Fish
I'm obviously struggling to go out on my own terms.
I want very badly to have a success story at the end of it, at the end of my career and say, regardless of how many matches I can win this summer, I want to go to the U.S. Open - for that be my final event - and say I went out on my own terms, instead of it being taken away from me in Winston-Salem in 2013.
You see a lot of guys going downhill as they get older, but I'm going the other way, and that's because of diet.
I had my job, which I loved to do, which I was really good at. I was at the top of my career, and I had it all taken away because of a mental illness.
I don't get tired anymore because I'm no longer carrying 30 pounds on me. It was about a lifestyle change. It was about what I ate and when I ate, and now I'm able to train harder.
The more and more I spoke about it, the more I found out how many people deal with it, the more I read about it and researched it, the more you start to realize how many Americans deal with some sort of mental illness on a daily basis. That gave me comfort.
I would not complain very much if I didn't feel well. I'd fake it on the court, not show that side of it.
I feel very blessed to play a sport for a living.
I was 21 when I made the the finals of Cincinnati and finished 20 in the world, and thought it was going to come pretty easy.
A lot of it is maturity and getting older. You know, sort of getting married and realizing you're not out there for yourself anymore.
Davis Cup means almost everything to me. — © Mardy Fish
Davis Cup means almost everything to me.
I don't feel like in my head I have anything to prove.
There were times I felt I'd never get my life back. Am I ever going to be normal and go out with my friends and have a beer and not think I am going to wake up at 3 A. M. and have anxious thoughts about what normal people are doing?
I was a guy who loved to be on my own at times and to travel and some of the most comfortable times were in the middle of my career flying overseas, where you have to turn your phone off and no one can get to you for 10 hours. It was just a really comfortable place for me.
I'd certainly like to feel I'm a better player than three titles, but it is what it is.
I've retired 15 times in my head, I mean literally. — © Mardy Fish
I've retired 15 times in my head, I mean literally.
We're trained from a very young age not to show weakness. And I was very good at that throughout my career.
I'm superstitious as far as stuff around the courts. I'll eat the same things and drink the same things, and have the same breakfast in the morning.
It's hard to play somebody who is wounded.
You can't play this game without being fit, and without being mentally fit and ready.
I've got an incredible family, I've been blessed to play a game for a living, and even more than that, I've been blessed to have the ability to play it and the ability to play two sports at the same time. There's not many people that are able to do that, so yeah, I feel very lucky.
There is no tournament to win for mental health. There are no quarterfinals, or semifinals, or finals.
You can be pretty selfish as tennis players, being an individual sport.
All of a sudden, it wasn't quite good enough to make the fourth round of a Grand Slam, when my whole life before that it was an incredible achievement and something that I had only done a couple of times.
It took me months and months to get back to normalcy - to have a glass of wine at dinner, to go out to a movie with my wife. Just those normal things that you take for granted I wasn't able to do for a long time.
I'm very comfortable knowing how hard I have worked in the later stages of my career.
Anytime you can beat a player that's going to go down as one of the best of all time, that's a good win. — © Mardy Fish
Anytime you can beat a player that's going to go down as one of the best of all time, that's a good win.
I regret not being able to mature quicker.
I've got a big serve, a hard serve, and quicker points as opposed to longer points.
I always wanted to be a professional athlete and really did not necessarily care which sport.
I put my head on my pillow now, knowing that in the later stages in my career, from 2010 on, I did everything I possibly could do to be as good as I could possibly be, I know it sounds really cheesy but it was actually true.
It's been well chronicled that I've had a lot of losses in finals.
Besides my strokes improving, I've gotten a lot more comfortable with the game. The travel's not so tough any more, I'm learning my way around the circuit. I'm learning to cope and I'm having fun. That's the key -- the tennis is fun and I'm really enjoying it.
Everybody deserves a shot at playing sports. It shouldn't matter in the least if that person is gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender. Building community through healthy and inclusive activities should be one of the main focuses behind athletics, and that isn't possible if you exclude LGBT individuals, especially our youth.
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