|
(E) Jeffrey Lesser Friend of Croatia, January 25, 2005

Mario Ancic and Jeffrey Lesser
INTERVIEW WITH JEFFREY
LESSER
By Katarina Tepesh
JEFFREY LESSER lives in West Orange, New Jersey, where he is a 16-year-old high
school junior. A "straight A" student, Jeffrey is the editorials editor of his
school newspaper, the Pioneer, and frequently contributes editorials, mainly
about politics. Jeff is the captain of the boys' tennis team at West Orange High
School. He hopes to attend Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, where
he wants to major in sports medicine and become a licensed physician. His mother
said that Jeff is such a big fan of Croatian tennis, he might as well just move
to Croatia altogether.
Katarina - Out of hundreds of tennis players from all over the world, we
Croatians are delighted that you have an intense interest for Croatian players!
How and when did it happen?
I first started following professional tennis when I was about 7 years old. At
the time, my two favorite tennis players were Michael Chang and Croatian Goran
Ivanisevic. I really admired and enjoyed the way Ivanisevic played, with his
huge lefty serve and solid strokes from the baseline. I am not really sure how
my love for Ivanisevic matriculated into an intense fandom of Croatian tennis,
but I know that I began to follow Ivan Ljubicic, who was Ivanisevic's compatriot
and occasional doubles partner. When Mario Ancic and Ivo Karlovic went pro, I
began to root for them as well, because I already was a big fan of Croatian
tennis from Ivanisevic and Ljubicic.
Who/What do you aspire to be?
When I grow up, I want to become an orthopaedic surgeon or a doctor for a sports
team. Because I don't see any method by which I can become a professional tennis
player or a professional athlete, I would really love to tie in medicine with my
first love, sports.
What extracurricular activities do you do in school?
In school, I am on the mock trial team, for which I am a lawyer (there are only
four lawyers in the whole school), and I am in Junior Statesmen of America, or
JSA, which is a debate club. I am also the editorials editor of my high school
paper, the Pioneer, for which I write articles, edit, and choose which articles
are printed in the paper.
What sports do you play?
I love playing tennis, and I am the captain of my high school tennis team. As a
Junior in high school, this will be my third year starting on the varsity team,
making me the longest tenured player currently on the team.
What other hobbies to do you have?
I love watching sports and going to sporting events. I have been to several New
York Knicks basketball games already this year, went to two San Francisco 49ers
football games, one in New Orleans and one in New Jersey, and go to Yankee games
often. I love professional sports, and my favorite team is the San Francisco
49ers of the NFL. I also love following professional tennis, and attended the US
Open seven times last year, following several of my favorite players and going
to most of their matches.
What type of music do you like?
I love classic rock, like Jethro Tull (my all-time favorite band), Lynyrd
Skynyrd, The Allman Brothers Band and Paul Simon. I go to as many classic rock
concerts as possible.
Do you do volunteer work or tutoring?
I volunteer three hours per week working at the Gift Shop at the Kessler
Institute of Rehabilitation in West Orange, New Jersey. I have been working
there since September of 2003. I am also part of the SALE program in my school,
which involves going to a middle school and immersing kids in the French
language and teaching them the basics of French so that they will be interested
in studying French in the future.
What type of student are you? Have you won any academic awards?
I am a very diligent and hard-working student. I have received straight A's in
every marking period of my first three years so far in high school, except for
the fourth marking period of my Freshman year, when I received a B in Biology in
one marking period (though I did obtain an A for the year, and in my school,
that is all that matters). That means that I have been on the high honor roll 8
times so far in high school and regular honor roll once. I am in line to obtain
a National Merits Scholarship for my score on the PSATs as well, but I do not
find out about this until September 2005.
Do you like to travel?
I love to travel. I have been to Italy, Israel, France, England, Switzerland,
Mexico, Canada, Hawaii, and out west to California for a summer playing tennis.
I went on a teen tour out to the Pacific Northwest of America and Canada, as
well.
What is your typical day like? What do you do when you are not in school?
My typical day involves going to school and doing school-related activities.
Every Monday after school, I volunteer at the Kessler Institute, and on
Tuesdays, I attend Hebrew High School for two hours. On Wednesdays and Thursdays
I have mock trial after school and JSA, and on Fridays I like to hang out with
my friends. Saturdays, I typically eat lunch with my family and do some
homework. At night, I go out with my friends. Sundays in the winter are reserved
for watching football with my father.
Do you really do your homework every day and clean your own room?
I actually think I do a pretty good job of completing my homework every day and
preparing for the next day in school. Cleaning my room is a different story,
however, as my mom can attest.
Do you have any brothers or sisters?
I have one brother, Eric, who is nineteen and in college, attending the
University of Pennsylvania. We see each other a lot and are very close.
Besides your parents, who are your idols?
Besides my parents, my idol would be my brother. He has affected everything I
have done in my life. I have learned from his mistakes and his successes in
life. He turned me on to sports and everything I love in life. However, I try to
be my own person, as well. I do not like to base my life off of somebody else's.
I try to be a unique individual.
You seem to have a very mature view on politics. Is it influenced by your
parents? What do your parents do for a living?
My view on politics is inevitably affected to a degree by the influence of my
parents and my brother. However, most of my opinions are made independently of
them and their influence. My mother works as a salesperson of software to major
corporations in the United States and my father is an attorney.
Would you say you are a typical Democrat who wants to change and improve the
world? Are you old enough to vote?
I most definitely would love to improve the world, because everyone knows
(except Bush, maybe) that there is much room for improvement. I believe that we
should put those in need first and not give tax cuts to the rich, but rather to
the lower and middle class who truly need the money. I am not old enough to
vote, but rest assured, when I am (next Presidential election), I will vote for
the candidate who will positively affect America and the world.
What was it like meeting Ancic at US Open 2004?
I was walking around the grounds of the US Open, and I remembered that Sanja
Ancic, Mario's sister, was playing in the juniors of the event. So, I went to
watch her for a little while; there were about 20 people watching. I don't think
any of them knew that she was Mario's sister, because sitting on a bench, with
no one recognizing him or approaching him, was Mario Ancic himself! I went and
sat right behind him, my mom next to me, and Mario's father I believe was
sitting behind me in the bleachers. Mario was reading a Croatian newspaper. I
waited until the end of the first set, which Sanja lost in a tiebreaker, to talk
to Mario, so as to not rudely disturb him while he was watching his sister. At
the end of the first set, I stood up and said, "Mario, I am a huge fan of
yours." He said, "Thank you." I asked him if I could take a photograph with him,
and he stood up and said, "Sure." He was kind of down because he had lost a few
days prior (to Belge Olivier Rochus, I was there) and his sister had dropped the
first set. My mom took two photos of the same shot, I said "Thank you," again,
and I sat back down to watch a little more of the match before I left. It was
amazing, I got to get a picture with one of my absolute favorite tennis players,
Wimbledon semifinalist, and rising star, Mario Ancic!
IVAN LJUBICIC AT AUSTRALIAN OPEN 2005
BY JEFFREY LESSER
For the twentieth time in his career, Ivan Ljubicic was ousted before the third
round of a Grand Slam. The 22nd ranked player in the world, Ljubicic has only
made it past the second round of a Grand Slam twice in his whole career, and has
never made it past the third round in these two instances. With his four-set,
6-7 4-6 7-6 2-6 loss to 19-year-old Marcos Baghdatis of Cyprus in the second
round of the Australian Open Wednesday, Ljubicic continued his frustrating
pattern of Grand Slam disappointments.
Considering his great success in other tournaments, Ljubicic's lack of success
in the Grand Slams is mind-boggling. This summer, in the tournament in
Indianapolis, Indiana, Ljubicic made a great run, defeating the crafty
Frenchman, Sebastian Grosjean, in the semifinals and just barely losing to Andy
Roddick, the second ranked player in the world, in the final after obtaining
several match points. Ivan was playing phenomenally. Then he went to the US Open
in Flushing Meadows, New York, and immediately lost to 58th ranked Hyung-Taik
Lee of Korea.
Three months ago, Ivan played great tennis in the Madrid Tennis Masters Series,
defeating Rainer Schuettler, Tim Henman, and gutting out a victory over the
hard-hitting Joachim Johansson before losing to the scrappy Argentine David
Nalbandian in the semifinal. This was a tournament to which only the top players
in the world are invited - much like a Grand Slam. Just a week ago in the
tournament in Doha, Qatar, Ljubicic defeated the promising young Spaniard Rafael
Nadal and his veteran compatriot Albert Costa, only bowing out to the number one
player in the world, Roger Federer, in the final.
Coming into the 2005 Australian Open, Ivan Ljubicic was playing magnificent
tennis. It showed in the first round of the tournament, in which he handily
defeated the hard-working Peruvian, Luis Horna, by a lopsided score of 6-4 6-3
6-3. Ljubicic confidently stated after the game that he "destroyed" his opponent
from the baseline and described his play as "excellent."
However, in the second round of the tournament, Ljubicic failed to come through.
Playing against Baghdatis, the talented but unpolished Cypriot baseliner who is
ranked just 155th in the world, Ljubicic was defeated in four sets. Ivan had
only 42 winners compared to 46 unforced errors, while Baghdatis played
brilliantly, striking 72 winners and only hitting 33 unforced errors. Ljubicic
converted on only one of eight break points.
Did Ljubicic just have an off-day? Everybody should be entitled to play poorly
once in a while. Baghdatis did play extremely well, and even if Ivan had played
as well as he had been in the past few months, the match would have been a
battle. However, Ljubicic has set an astounding and incomprehensible pattern of
losing early in Grand Slams to players worse than he is. There is absolutely no
reason that Ljubicic should lose time and time again before the third round of a
Grand Slam, especially when he is playing some of the best tennis of his life in
all of the other tournaments.
As a fan of Croatian tennis and of Ivan Ljubicic, I pray that it is just a
coincidence that Ivan fails to succeed in the Grand Slams of tennis. I pray that
one of these days, he will show the world on the grandest stage what a talented
player he actually is. I pray that he reaches the third, or even the fourth
round (gasp!) of a major this year. Every knowledgeable tennis fan knows he is
more than capable of doing this and much more.
Until then, I, along with the rest of his fans, will wait for Croatia's best and
highest-ranked player to come through and finally play well at a major. It makes
no sense why he can defeat Rainer Schuettler, Rafael Nadal, Sebastian Grosjean,
and Tim Henman in regular tournaments and then go lose to 19-year-old Marcos
Baghdatis in the second round of the 2005 Australian Open.
Until then, I will watch and wait patiently and eagerly for Ivan Ljubicic to win
when it counts the most. Hopefully, it will be sooner rather than later.
JEFFREY LESSER lives in West Orange, New Jersey, where he is a 16-year-old high
school junior. A "straight A" student, Jeffrey is the editorials editor of his
school newspaper, the Pioneer, and frequently contributes editorials, mainly
about politics. Jeff is the captain of the boys' tennis team at West Orange High
School. He hopes to attend Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, where
he wants to major in sports medicine and become a licensed physician. His mother
said that Jeff is such a big fan of Croatian tennis, he might as well just move
to Croatia altogether.
Jeff can be reached at
JffryLssr@aol.com
Formatted for CROWN by Nenad Bach
Distributed by CroatianWorld.net. This message is intended for Croatian Associations/Institutions and their Friends in Croatia and in the World. The opinions/articles expressed on this list do not reflect personal opinions of the moderator. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, please delete or destroy all copies of this communication and please, let us know!
|