The sky is cloudy on Thursday morning. Outside the chirping birds. It's easy to chill. There's peace on Melrose Avenue in London.The silence around and the proximity of the Wimbledon tennis court make it an attractive location for tennis players during the third grandslam of the season. This year, she decided to try Lucie Safarova, the world's sixth world tennis player. Smiling - yes, how else - welcomes the expedition of Czech journalists at 11 o'clock in the door of their London base. Rob Steckley is just giving banana oatmeal. "I have three packs," boasts Safar's packs of food that he made famous during a successful Paris race that ended in the final. And if the oatmeal has remained superstitious? "Not even that. But I'm taught it.And it is the easiest. " The house has ordered via an agency that cooperates with the tournament and mediates accommodation at Wimbledon. Sam is asleep in the largest room under the roof, where the warmth is the same. "It was clear who would go. Rob is from Canada, so he's terrible. If the air conditioning was here, it would go to sixteen degrees and I would have frozen. " On the ground floor there is a living room, a dining room and a small kitchen. Clean and tidy everywhere. Most of the time, the Safari spends in the garden under the tree. She reads the book Life Without Borders about Chrismar Wellington's ultramarathon. "It's interesting to read about other athletes, but I would not like this discipline.This is masochism, "he says. As close as possible to the home environmentchatting friends.At other times, he or she has a free time on the phone. "I am writing with my buddies SMS or WhatsApp, but I would like to stay on Facebook, that's not."
Near her lives my friend Barbora Strycova, who set off on a manicure and plan a barbecue. "Maybe in busy New York it's more exhausting, here's a good thing. Man is at home and resting. " He is having breakfast at his leased base, usually having lunch at the All England Club, and coaching Steckley with coach in the evening to import food. The Wimbledon duo Safarova and Steckley "But I'm an old and boring man," laughs a 35-year-old Canadian-and it's hard for him, a long-haired bohemian, to believe. But he will soon add another explanation: "If you want chaos, rent a house in the city.Here it is not boring. You will approach the home environment as much as possible. " Previously lived with Berdychpragmatic. The Aorangi training courts take it from the house just ten minutes on foot. "It does a lot when you are on the courts for 14 days," Safarova says. "When one day was raining and we had to train at 12, we packed up and decided to go to the evening." The tournaments usually live in hotel rooms, so grandslam's "luxury" is a welcome change . Previously, they lived at Wimbledon with their friend Tomas Berdych, who has been using a coach house for the third year in a row. How long will he stay in it?Help arrives today, when a 3rd round match with Sloane Stephens, the Successor of Strýcka, is waiting for her. "Certainly it will be a hard game because Sloane is playing well now," Saffar says. "I have to play aggressively and take advantage of left-handed rotation into her bekhed." When it comes out, it just will not disappear from Melrose Avenue.
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