“Sorry, guys,” Johanna Konta said to reporters after her three-hour, 4-6, 6-4, 8-6 win over Ekaterina Makarova in the fourth round of the Australian Open on Monday. “I’m like a broken record.”
How many athletes have you heard apologize for repeating—over and over, with a glazed look in their eyes—the same post-game cliché? In the U.S., at least, it’s assumed that every player will constantly inform the world that he or she “took it one day at a time” and “just tried to stay focused.”
Maybe it’s an English thing. Over the years, women tennis players from the U.K. haven’t had to give many post-win interviews Down Under. With her marathon victory over Makarova, the 24-year-old Konta, who moved to England from Australia 11 years ago, became the first British woman to reach the Aussie Open quarterfinals in 32 years.
So what did Konta, who shot up 103 spots in the rankings in 2015, feel like she had to apologize to us for? What note does this "broken record" keep repeating? Something, it seems, about "the journey" and "the process." To cite a few recent examples from her press conferences: