For us, the Grand Slams are very important. When the Grand Slams come, you're thinking, 'OK, this is the tournament.' To lose there is disappointing.
Our biggest events are the Grand Slams and are always going to be the Grand Slams.
You want to try and win as many slams as possible in your career. As a tennis player, that's what we always dream of as a kid, wanting to play slams, wanting to win them.
I would love to have a beautiful family one day, to win Slams. I'd love my kids to see me play before I retire.
A door jumps out from shadows, then jumps away. This is what I've come to find: the back door, unlatched. Tooled by insular wind, it slams and slams without meaning to and without meaning.
You always love playing in finals at any tournament. The grand slams and stuff like that are obviously the priorities but any titles go on your record.
It's hard to win Grand Slams.
My goal is to be No. 1 and to win Grand Slams.
You should play all the slams you physically can.
I want to win Slams and be No. 1 one day.
People aren't winning Slams at 21 anymore. It's later.
I always come very motivated to the Grand Slams.
I want to play my best tennis at the Grand Slams.
But you are always remembered for how many Slams you win, not weeks at No. 1.
When God closes one door, He slams another in your face
Playing Slams definitely gives you a surreal view of what can happen, and what you can be.