I let my racket do the talking.

The best players are consistent.

I have routines but not superstitions.

I think my style of game is aggressive.

Finally a Spanish girl can play on grass.

I like Sergio Ramos, who plays Real Madrid.

I adapt more to the match for the second set.

I'm not afraid to do long rallies. I like that.

I just thought at Wimbledon I was very nervous.

When I was young, I looked up to Martina Hingis.

I always come very motivated to the Grand Slams.

I take every match as a final. It's very important.

Once you taste the sweet honey, you want more of that.

I don't want to retire before the tournament starts for me.

I like to dance to Latin music, like salsa, like reggaeton.

The tough matches never go my way, so I want to change that.

This is just a 'Boom!' of energy for me to win a Grand Slam.

I'm used to putting so many things aside to be able to compete.

The first tournament I ever played, I won. I was six years old.

I go for my shots with no regrets, even if I play to the fence.

I like to have bright colors and to feel feminine on the court.

I think the players like to play with sunny days and warm weather.

I think I'm always nervous, even if I play not on the center court.

Tennis is what I've always wanted to do, so it is my dream to be on top.

All I want is to win matches, and the ranking sooner or later will come.

I always play with a very high ponytail so that my hair doesn't bother me.

With time, I've got more used to grass, and I think my style of game helps.

When you're tired, you say, 'Hey, I need to rest from tennis or something.'

To see that I'm on a good path, that I'm improving, is what I want to feel.

If we push for the children to know tennis, they have the chance to like it.

In Spain, if you don't follow football, you're dead. You don't have conversation.

The best thing is being part of history and achieving something you've dreamed of.

To have Serena in the Wimbledon final, I think, is the hardest match you can have.

I think people have this love-hate relationship with tennis. I also feel like that.

There's no room for being disappointed or for excuses, 'Oh, I had four match points.'

I prefer to be hunted compared to the other way around... I don't know how you say it.

When I came to Spain, I joined a tennis academy, and that was where I learnt the game.

If you want to win a Grand Slam, when you dream, you say, 'I want Serena in the final.'

You can't be the best player if suddenly you play well and the next day you play badly.

Is very hard to find, like, a recipe to feel good fitness-wise, tennistically, mentally.

I don't know a lot of people who achieve what they have really dreamed of as a little girl.

I'm happy that once again I see myself winning a Grand Slam, something that is so hard to do.

Being in a Grand Slam, doesn't matter what you did before, it's always nervous and excitement.

When you're a kid and practice on clay, you're always, 'Oh, I wish I could win Roland Garros.'

When you win, everything is so beautiful, and when you don't, it's not, so everything is darker.

It's true that my body's not small and my style is not defensive. I am aggressive, and I am tall.

I learned that if you want something, you've got to really go for it, try to put the nerves aside.

I didn't play juniors, really. I only played Roland Garros juniors and maybe some European tournaments.

To be able to make other girls play - and hopefully in Latin America as well - is very important to me.

For sure, people are looking more at what I'm doing, but I think that's fine. It's a good sign. I like it.

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