![]() ![]() Perhaps this is why, strangely, it rings least true at moments of maximum declared honesty. It's not that Open reads as if it's been written with a view to a lucrative serial deal (normal enough) it reads as if it's already a serialisation of itself with potential headlines (Agassi took crystal meth!) and pull quotes ("I always hated tennis") thrown in. The problem with JR, Andre's book coach, is that he makes Writing Easy. We are dealing, let's not forget, with someone who had roughly the same formal education as Wayne Rooney or Gazza.Īgassi credits the dramatic, mid-90s revival in his fortunes to his new coach, Brad Gilbert, author of Winning Ugly. I agree, this does come as a disappointment, even if we accept that it's as unreasonable to expect Agassi to sit down and actually write a book as it is to expect Martin Amis (to whom we shall return) suddenly to make the Wimbledon finals. Um, who? He's Agassi's collaborator, the guy who turned hundreds of hours of taped conversations into plausible prose. ![]() ![]() ![]() If Andre Agassi's Open is anything to go by, great tennis players begin to have minds like JR Moehringer. N orman Mailer reckoned that, as big fights loomed, great boxers "begin to have inner lives like Hemingway or Dostoevsky, Tolstoy or Faulkner, Joyce or Melville". ![]()
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