It is hard because I have played since I was three years old, and everything is tennis, tennis. I am super-passionate about it. And I love it. But I always like to cook, I listen to music. I just try to be like a regular girl.

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

After you win, people expect you to always play so good. When that doesn't happen, it's hard to deal with.

I've said before that when you win, people think it's so easy, but it's not so easy to handle it, and probably I expect myself to always play so good.

I didn't do anything special after the French Open, after winning the tournament. I just had a nice dinner with my team and family, but I was so exhausted that I went to sleep early and couldn't stay up.

I was like, 'Did I win Roland Garros? What happened?'

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

I grew up, and my body was not like a Spanish player. I was tall. I had a powerful game; my arms were long, so I'm like, 'No, you can't play like Spanish players.'

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

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

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

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

I couldn't be accepted into tennis school because I was too young. I had to wait a year until I was four before they'd accept me.

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

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

My father is Spanish, and he went to Venezuela looking for a job. He was 20 something, and he fell in love with a Venezuelan girl. He owns a company there, producing iron and bronze.

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

You can have a couple of games where you play bad or very good. I think I'm a type of player that days before I know how I feel, if I'm playing good, if I'm playing bad. This is not like lottery here.

I try to focus on more winning matches here and try to go forward rather than the ranking because is the first step, to win matches, getting far in tournament, and we see after.

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

I adapt more to the match for the second set.

If I lose the first set, I still have two more. Let's not make a drama, you know.

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

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