'I hate tennis': Agassi's book adds to his tale
Posted Oct 29, 2009 1:10 PM
 By HOWARD FENDRICH
(AP)
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-So much of Andre Agassi's life has been spent in the public eye — the various highs and lows, on and off the court, during his transformation from tennis brat to elder statesman — that it was possible to wonder how much more there was to be said about it all.
Plenty, it turns out. Excerpts of Agassi's upcoming autobiography published Wednesday by Sports Illustrated and the Times of London contain graphic depictions of his use of crystal meth, an account of how he wriggled his way out of a suspension by lying to the ATP tour after failing a 1997 drug test, and the jarring contention that he always hated tennis "with a dark and secret passion" because of his overbearing father.
If image is indeed everything, as Agassi used to say to sell a sponsor's cameras, he has provided new, indelible, behind-the-scenes images — along with raising questions about why he chose to reveal his crystal meth habit.
"Is it cathartic? I don't know. I think it's strictly from the heart. That's the way he has operated in my view, going back to the latter portion of his playing career," said Arlen Kantarian, who ran the U.S. Open from 2000-08. "I'm sure he feels good about getting it out on the table."
Agassi, who won eight Grand Slam singles titles before retiring in 2006, is not explaining himself at the moment. His representative referred interview requests to his publishing company, which has set up a "60 Minutes" appearance on Nov. 8, the day before the book's scheduled release.
After an exhibition match Sunday in Macau against longtime rival Pete Sampras, Agassi was asked if the book contains major revelations.
"I think I had to learn a lot about myself through the process," Agassi said. "There was a lot that even surprised me. So to think that one won't be surprised by it, it would be an understatement.
"Whatever revelations exist, you'll get to see in full glory," he added. "But the truth is, my hope is that somebody doesn't just learn more about me, what it is I've been through, but somehow through those lessons, they can learn a lot about themselves. And I think it's fair to say that they will."
SI and the Times of London are among four publications that paid for the rights to print parts of "Open: An Autobiography." Among the material excerpted:
— Agassi calls his father "violent by nature," and recalls being in the car when his father pointed a handgun at another driver.
— He writes about making money by hustling people on tennis courts and remembers when, at 9 years old, he beat former NFL great Jim Brown in a match to win a $500 bet for his father.
— He poignantly recalls a telephone conversation with his father after winning Grand Slam title No. 1 at Wimbledon in 1992. Dad's initial reaction? "You had no business losing that fourth set," Agassi writes.
— He writes about using crystal meth "a lot" and in sometimes-positive terms, including reference to "a tidal wave of euphoria that sweeps away every negative thought in my head. I've never felt so alive, so hopeful — and I've never felt such energy."
"Apart from the buzz of getting high," he says, "I get an undeniable satisfaction from harming myself and shortening my career," he writes. But the physical aftermath is hideous. After two days of being high, of not sleeping, I'm an alien. I have the audacity to wonder why I feel so rotten. I'm an athlete, my body should be able to handle this."
— Agassi says he wrote to the ATP tour to explain the 1997 positive test and that "the central lie of the letter" was that he claimed he accidentally drank from a soda spiked with meth by his assistant "Slim."
U.S. Fed Cup captain Mary Joe Fernandez, a former player who was a contemporary of Agassi's, described the drug revelations as disappointing and "a bit of a shock."
"It takes a lot of guts and courage to come out and say something that nobody would have really known about," Fernandez said. "I've always admired Andre. He was a huge part of inspiring my generation, and he did a lot of great things and continues to do a lot of great things. He's opening up now, and that's his choice. Maybe people can learn from it and not make the same mistakes."
Agassi turned pro in 1986, reached his first major final at the French Open in 1990, quickly drew plenty of attention and kept drawing it — for his service returns, considered by many to be the best in the game; for his quick-as-could-be reflexes at the baseline; for his denim shorts, Day-Glo shirts, flowing hair and dangling earrings; for his two-year marriage to Brooke Shields and friendship with Barbra Streisand that provided fodder for the tabloids.
He won Wimbledon in 1992, was ranked No. 1 in 1995, won an Olympic gold medal in 1996 — and then it all unraveled. He dropped to 141st in the rankings and resorted to playing in tennis' minor leagues in 1997, the year he says he first tried crystal meth.
After he escaped punishment for the drug test, he writes, his thought was: "New life."
In addition to returning to No. 1 in the world, and completing a career Grand Slam, Agassi became an influential voice on the tennis tour. He also raised tens of millions of dollars for at-risk youths in his hometown of Las Vegas and opened a preparatory academy there.
He also got remarried, to tennis great Steffi Graf — he calls her "Stefanie" in the book — and they have two children.
Always evolving.
"It fits in with the story arc of his redemption," said Gene Grabowski, who guides high-profile figures — Roger Clemens is a client — through public relations crises.
"It's going to make Andre Agassi even richer. This is going to help him sell his book, which is why he wrote it," Grabowski said.
Agassi reportedly received at least $5 million for the book; the first printing is a half-million copies, a relatively high number in publishing.
"His book will probably sell. It seems very interesting, to say the least," seven-time Grand Slam singles champion Venus Williams said Wednesday after playing at the WTA Championships in Doha, Qatar. "But what am I supposed to say about Andre's life? I can't really say anything."
Calling Agassi "an icon of his sport," IOC president Jacques Rogge said, "If his admission would go together with the message to young athletes that it should not be repeated, then that would be useful."
The International Tennis Federation said the reference to the 1997 drug test was surprising but noted that it did not oversee anti-doping efforts on the men's tour back then. The ATP, which did, issued a statement Wednesday about its rules, in general, noting an independent panel makes the final decision on a doping violation.
John Fahey, president of the World Anti-Doping Agency, called on the ATP to "shed light on this allegation."
The tour declined repeated requests from The Associated Press to address the specifics of Agassi's account.
Associated Press writer Min Lee in Hong Kong and AP sports writers Mattias Karen in Doha, Steve Wine in Miami, Rachel Cohen in New York, Steve Wilson in London and contributed to this report.
(This version CORRECTS location of Agassi-Sampras match to Macau instead of China; SUBS 30th graf to correct to John Fahey sted Jim Fahey.)
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-10-29 13:33:51

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COMMENTS ( 23 )
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stiffarelli
1:56AM Nov 7 2009 
how on earth can you say andre is a moron? have you ever seen a tennis match? he is, without a doubt, the most inspirational and talented tennis player of all time. with his build, he had no business stepping on the court with other pros, but he found a way to win. that's agassi, he's not the favorite, he's the underdog, he's like us. we all have a little agassi in us and that's what inspires us to give it our best. he is the reason i started playing. meeting him at nick's in florida was one of the best days of my life. give up this one strike and youre out bs and show a little respect.
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Mlp7595
12:59PM Oct 31 2009 
Agassi was a complete moron from the first time he stepped on the court and that has continued until this day and will, undoubtedly, continue in the future. He destroyed a classy sport with arrogant, tasteless and self-serving actions, on and off the court, all through his career. Why would anybody expect anything different now. I shut the tennis off any time he was on and when he became the face of tennis, I shut tennis off and have never gone back. I am sure I am not alone and in fact know many others. Agassi began the destuction of tennis as a major sport and Navratilova/King, the loudmouthed lesbians, and the self-centered, loudmouthed and disrespectful Williams sisters have finished it off. It will take many years and some classy champions, if ever, to turn this around. Good luck
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cwarpspeed
9:54AM Oct 29 2009 
Are they still complaining about Serena's tantrum?
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jdt33606
11:53PM Oct 28 2009 
Old as Grandma Moses...but I still love tennis and I still love Andre Agassi no matter what. I know little about drugs, alcohol was our choice! But I've heard crystal meth is very hard to get clean of for good. So, I'll put Andre on my prayer list and you "guys" can forgeddabout the snide comments about God and prayer. It works. God bless.
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Papacoolrice42
2:12PM Oct 28 2009 
By looking at the size of Agassis head you knew he had to be on something,******* ok he's white
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Papacoolrice42
2:01PM Oct 28 2009 
Hey BDCT245 White people are not as well liked around the world as they may try to fool people into believing.Abuse people of all races until they get tired of it except the Mexicans who haven't woke up yet..Theres a guy named Bernie Madoff who took everything but the kitchen sink and may still have his hand in your pocket but you don't know it .Meth,Speed,Glue and Heroin was like a bedtime snack for some of those junkies.Nothing worse than seeing a bent over white guy stoned .DNA is also forcing prisions to release humans who have no connections to the crimes they were charged with.Now you got the racist cops looking over their sholders.Can't hide behind the badge forever.But the white race is flawless.Yeah right
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Wallabee49
1:58PM Oct 28 2009 
Although Y2KAPOLLO has his/her timelines mixed up, all you guys are idiots if you can't see s/he is being SARCASTIC. It really is suspicious that a feeble little "oops" letter would get the charge thrown out for Agassi when perhaps it wouldn't have worked for a player from a more stereotypically drug-user demographic. Y2KAPOLLO & I are just sayin'.
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Papacoolrice42
1:47PM Oct 28 2009 
Yes,flawless...........why are so many white women hooking up with black and not looking back
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