I've pretty much been portrayed as every style thing you can be. After Wimbledon you are Andy Everyman, who everybody is rooting for. I think the meat and potatoes of who I am hasn't been covered yet.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
There's a certain beauty and majesty to Wimbledon. The elegance, the way the grass looks on TV.
I will have won Wimbledon this year in 2013, and I will stop with that. It was magnificent. You will certainly see me at tournaments again, but not playing.
Every individual has his own style, his own way of presenting himself on and off the field.
Grass is a surface I have always loved, Wimbledon is a tournament I have always loved.
I'm more in that Rafa Nadal high-energy high-octane mold out there. I wear that emotion on the court. That's how I play my best tennis. People either like that or not. And I can't change that: that's who I am on a tennis court.
I'm a postmodern commentator, and so, in a cheeky parallel to James Joyce or James Kelman, I get to places, verbally, that are a little unusual - when I talk about Jocky Wilson and end up sounding like a Jackson Pollock of the commentary box.
I don't need to come back to Wimbledon every year because I can't live without it. I'd be totally cool without tennis.
Everybody always talks about the pressure of playing at Wimbledon, how tough it is, but the people watching make it so much easier to play.
I think I owe it to myself and my fans in Britain to play one more Wimbledon.
Not winning at Wimbledon is not going to bother me forever.