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  • Agassi: No regrets writing tell-all book

    May. 19, 2010

    Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Agassi: No regrets writing tell-all book

    Las Vegan says he has spoken with some of autobiography's critics

    By STEVE CARP
    LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

    Seven months after his autobiography "Open" debuted on bookshelves, Andre
    Agassi has no regrets about his decision to let the world in on his life.

    Agassi is not second-guessing his decision to write the tell-all book, even
    though he admitted using drugs, which resulted in some of tennis' greatest
    performers criticizing and questioning whether the Las Vegas legend's
    accomplishments were tarnished.

    "The choice was to write the book or not," Agassi said Wednesday at the
    Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy, where five students received
    college scholarships. "The choice isn't to write the book and kinda talk
    about your life. It's about telling my story honestly and transparently."

    "Open," which reached No. 1 on the New York Times' best seller list in
    November, has sold 530,000 copies. The book's paperback version goes on sale
    Aug. 10 with a first printing of 200,000 copies.

    "I don't know how many books have been sold," he said. "It wasn't about
    that. My hope is whoever reads it was profoundly impacted, one way or the
    other."

    Agassi said he has spoken to a few of his critics, including Martina
    Navratilova, who condemned Agassi's use of crystal methamphetamine when he
    was 22 years old and likened it to today's athletes using steroids and
    performance-enhancing drugs.

    "I did talk to Martina, and she said she felt bad how she was represented in
    her comments," Agassi said. "I told her not to worry about it.

    "When I talk to people who spoke out about me, I asked them, 'Did you read
    the book or not?' They hadn't read it. I don't have any resentment toward
    anyone."

    The one regret Agassi does have was his joke about fellow legend Pete
    Sampras when the two were playing in a fundraising match with Roger Federer
    and Rafael Nadal in Indian Wells, Calif., for victims of the January
    earthquake in Haiti. Sampras had made fun of Agassi's pigeon-toed gait, and
    Agassi made a joke about Sampras being a cheap tipper.

    Sampras bristled at the crack and launched a less-than-friendly serve in
    Agassi's direction. It put a damper on what had been a fun evening.

    "There were probably 150 jokes told during that match and one that bombed,"
    Agassi said. "I have great respect for Pete, and I did call him and
    apologize."

    Now 40 years old, Agassi said his appearances on the tennis court will be
    few and probably just for charity purposes. He will not play another season
    of World Team Tennis after spending last summer with the Philadelphia
    Freedoms.
    "I've always been supportive of Team Tennis," he said. "I enjoyed it, but
    it's hard to get out there at my age."

    Don't look for a sequel to "Open," either. "I think my days as an author are
    over," he said. "It wasn't easy, and writing the book in a present tense was
    the hardest part. It's a real high-wire act."
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