The French Open commencing May 27 2002

G. CANAS/L. Hewitt 6-7, 7-6, 6-4, 6-3

Q. Canas is able to play four hours and 28 minutes one day, four hours and 13 minutes today, is he Superman or what?

LLEYTON HEWITT: He's pretty strong. You know, there's times where - you know, I've said in the past as well - where you think he's looking a bit tired, but then he bounces back pretty well. You know, you've got to take your hat off to him. You know, physically he's very strong out there.

Q. Is it something that surprised you?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No. I played him last year in five sets here. I've seen him in the Davis Cup. You know, I think he even goes, you know, a little bit foxy. In the Davis Cup, when Scott Draper was playing him, looked like he was down and out at the end of the third set, then he bounced back somehow.

Q. How were you feeling in the last few games?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Not too bad. I was up and down the whole match a little bit. You know, you have times where you bounce back and you feel pretty good. You know, I think the end of the second set, I was able to do that. Wasn't quite able to, you know, finish the second set off after I fought back hard. And then, you know, the start of the fourth -- the end of the third, start of the fourth, actually picked up my level again, was feeling pretty strong out there. Then you start hitting a wall again. A lot's got to do with timing. When you're on your highs, try to ride them as much as possible.

Q. Did you ever play a tiebreak like this?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No, not as long as that.

Q. The crowd didn't seem to like you very much. They didn't like the geraniums , the smashing of the flowers. They booed you off the court. Is that difficult where both of you were playing well?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I felt like the crowd was pretty fair out there. I'm not complaining about anything.

Q. Did your mind go back to 12 months ago at all during the match?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, obviously, thoughts go through your mind. But I didn't want to get out there and get two-sets-to-Love down and do it the tough way. When I felt like I won the first set, I felt like that was a good set out there today. I felt, you know, could have got one of those set points, you know, I had a few of them, especially the 6-4 one, finished it off a bit quicker in the tiebreak, could have been a totally different story. A lot of tennis matches depend on one or two points out there. You know, it's sort of getting that small advantage, that little edge out there. You know, he was able to get it and I wasn't today. That was probably the telling story.

Q. After the function on Tuesday, what are your plans?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Don't know. I don't know when I'm going, but I'm obviously playing Queen's and Rosmalen and then Wimby. Put the clay court shoes away for another 10 months, get ready for grass.

Q. Seems like you were right back in in the fourth. Then uncharacteristic, you lose six games in a row. Is that a clay thing, a mental thing?

LLEYTON HEWITT: As I said before, if you were listening, I was talking about the highs and lows you experience playing five sets.

Q. Apart from just the general strenuous nature of the match, was there anything physically holding you back? Are you a hundred percent healthy at the moment?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, I felt pretty good out there, which is a good thing. I felt like I was moving pretty well out there. Obviously, you know, you start struggling. You know, as I said, you have times out there just playing five sets and playing over four hours. I didn't feel like anything going into the match was, you know, hampering me at all.

Q. Just looking ahead to Wimbledon, if you're not the top seed there, given that you'll probably still be No. 1 in the world, how do you feel about that? How do you feel about their seeding system?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Doesn't worry me at all. I'll be playing Wimbledon.

Q. Do you expect to be top speed?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Doesn't worry me. I don't know how they're going to do it. You know, I'm sure I'm not going to drop out of the top four. I think the top four, sort of there's no difference whether you're 1, 2, 3 or 4. To me, the tradition of Wimbledon and that, you know, I've got no problem with it.

Q. How do you see Canas' chances for the rest of the tournament?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, if he hasn't used too much energy, I think he's got a good chance. Yeah, he had not such a great, you know, start to the clay court season, but he's come home strong now the last couple of weeks. He's getting better and better I think with every match that he plays. You know, I think Costa is winning. Costa is playing some of the best tennis I've ever seen him play for a long time. So that's going to be a tough match, if he has to play Costa or Kuerten. Corretja.... I don't know who won the other match.

Q. Costa won.

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know who is in the next round, or whatever, in the half. Corretja is obviously there. He's got a lot of experience. You know, if he can put, what is it, three or four of those matches together, he's got a chance.

Q. This is the first year here you haven't improved on your performance. Is there one thing you need to learn to go all the way here?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know. You learn a lot coming back to, you know, places all the time. When you lose, doesn't matter what round you make, I think you still learn things. Still another learning experience for me playing on clay.

Q. After a match big like this, it's never in your -- never cross your mind the idea of two Argentinians were caught for doping?

LLEYTON HEWITT: What's that? No, no. Hasn't even crossed my mind, no.

L. HEWITT/S. Schalken 6-1, 7-5, 6-7, 6-1

Q. How was that in terms of improvement from what you've been looking for?

LLEYTON HEWITT: It was a lot better. You know, it was a tough match to get through. You know, Sjeng, I got a lot of respect for his game. The way he plays out there, he's a tough competitor to get on top of. He showed that after I was able to come back, after he served for the second. I was up a break early in the third. He still dug deep to get out of that set. I felt like when I played my best tennis, though, I was in control of the match, which is good.

Q. A lot of Aussies before you, like Patrick Rafter, have had sort of worldwide fame, have been very popular around the world. Yet as the No. 1 player, you're one of the more unknown No. 1's in the world. That is by your choice to be private or is it a management issue where they want to keep you private? What is your take on that?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Don't know. Probably I'm a bit younger than everyone else, I'd say, as well.

Q. In the match today, you were talking about how he fought back and you had to come back. You felt you were in control, at times it looked like you were cruising. Then all of a sudden you were behind again. How hard is it to focus your mind after that and to come back?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, it's tough. As I said before, I felt like I played a really good first set, got on top of him, then played one loose game early in the second to go down a break. Had a lot of chances I felt to break back throughout the second set, and wasn't able to do that until the end, then played really well for four or five games. Got up an early break in the third. He played a little bit better, but I lost concentration. 3-Love, 15-30 on his serve, felt like I was really getting in a good rhythm. Took my foot off the pedal a little bit there. It's a tough thing to bounce back from I think when, you know, you feel like sometimes you should be in the locker room, and you're still out there playing the fourth set. I was able to, you know, keep my concentration and focus on, you know, finishing it off.

Q. Back to the question I asked before. Do you want to be part of sort of the world scope of a No. 1 athlete or do you prefer to be off the radar a little bit? Is that more your personality?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know. Yeah, sometimes I enjoy being out there and being in the spotlight and that, but then there's other times when I prefer to, you know, keep to myself and just be with family and friends. That's me, I think, a little bit as well. When I'm out there, you know, I understand what comes with, you know, being the world No. 1 at the time, you know, all the conditions that are part of it. I've seen what Patrick Rafter has had to go through. I've been able to experience that right next to him, so I know the whole deal. But I don't all the time, you know, like being in the spotlight I don't think. You know, I'd say most athletes are the same. Maybe I'm a little bit more.

Q. When you talk about the areas where you can improve, is the serve one of them?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah. I felt like I mixed up my serve a lot better today than I did the last few days. But my first couple rounds, I really struggled serving-wise. Didn't feel like I had great rhythm. I worked on it a bit yesterday. I felt like I picked it up again today.My next match, hopefully -- it's a tough thing on clay. No matter how well you're serving, you still feel like, you know, you're not going to go out there and serve four unreturnables and get an easy service game. That's the tough thing about playing on this surface, whereas on hard court or grass, can you get away with those cheap service games, whereas you have to fight for every point long and hard on clay. So, you know, it takes the serve out of it a little bit, as well.

Q. What are the fundamental things about clay that maybe you feel you're getting better at, that would give you a chance to win here?

LLEYTON HEWITT: You know, just the whole sliding, I think tactics, strategy, stuff like that more. You know, the more matches, the more years that I play on the surface, the better off I get. You know, it just comes from experience a lot. I grew up, my whole movement, my footwork, all growing up on hard court. You know, on hard court I'd say, you know, I'm pretty much one of the best movers around. You get on clay, it's totally different. It takes you a while, especially when I haven't played for 10 months on clay, again to come into the whole clay court season - which I only play for one and a half months, you know, learn all those things straightaway again. I feel like it takes me a little bit longer than maybe some of the other guys who go home, they're spending most of the year with their clay court shoes on.

Q. Some people think you would be a little suspect of being overpowered because you're smaller. In a way, this should be better for you, isn't it? Slows down their serves, groundstrokes.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, in some ways. But I don't think that worries me on grass or hard court. I think I've beaten, you know, most of the power guys around on grass and hard court. I don't think I sort of have to prove that anymore. Clay, you know, takes the serve out of it, sure. But you still got to be able to hit through the slowness of the court out there, as well, which is another thing.

Q. Did you feel he was attacking your second serve?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I felt like he changed his game up. He came out and I felt like he was feeling me out a little bit at the start. He rallied a lot of balls. He wasn't going for a lot of winners. I felt like I did it back to him. I was able to do it better in the first set. So that left him with having to change his game plan. Then he started trying to attack a little bit more. You know, it feels like it's pretty slow out there to me. It's hard to hit a lot of winners. He got frustrated. Then he was starting to go for some of the wrong balls. Then he started serving a little bit better, I felt, and he was trying to come in a lot more.

Q. The difference between the No. 1 and 33, that you make the big points on the crucial times?

LLEYTON HEWITT: It's probably got a little bit to do with it. Sjeng, he's played in a enough big matches to be able to handle himself. He's beaten a lot of the best players around to know what to do on the big points. At the end of the day, probably in the Slams and stuff like that, there's only a few points here and there that you get through on.

Q. Do you think he can be a better player than No. 33 in the world?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Sjeng, a lot better.

Q. First 20, 25?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, a lot better. He can play on all surfaces. I remember seeing him do well on grass at Wimbledon against Flip in that marathon match. He can play on hard court. He's obviously good on clay. Indoors, he's good. I think he should be a lot higher than what he is.

Q. Going back to the subject of the surfaces. You're talking about improving on clay. How important is it to you to improve here and which would you prefer, the French Open or Wimbledon, to win?

LLEYTON HEWITT: You know, it's hard to say. Slams are Slams. Take any one of them, I think. You know, growing up I think back in Australia, I think Wimbledon is looked at as the bigger Slam than the French Open. But, you know, to me when you're out there playing, it doesn't make much difference. I'd take the French any day if I could get it (smiling). What was the start of the question? Sorry.

Q. That was it. How important is it to you to prove yourself?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, I think it's important to be able to play well on all surfaces for me. I think I've got the game to do that. As I said in the past, I've got to be a little more patient I think on grass and clay to get the better results week-in and week-out.

Q. Is it strange that Sjeng has never been through the third round in a Grand Slam?

LLEYTON HEWITT: That is a bit strange, I'd say. How old is he?

Q. 26.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, it is strange. I wouldn't have thought that. I think he's got -- as I said before, I think he can do well on all surfaces. Maybe draws have a little bit to do with it. You have to have a little bit of luck in the draws. You know, I wouldn't think it's going to be long before he passes that.

Q. Can you give us your thoughts on your opponents in the next round, either Moya or Canas?

LLEYTON HEWITT: It's going to be tough either way. I've struggled against Moya the last couple times on clay, beat him earlier this year on hard court in straight sets. You know, I feel like I'm getting better and better on clay. Try at least give him a bit more of a match than I gave him the last couple times. Canas, you know, he's a tough competitor. This is by far his best surface. I played him here in the Round of 16 last year, was down two sets to love, came back and won in five. It's not going to be easy either way.

Q. There's a bomb threat on Court 1.

LLEYTON HEWITT: I saw that.

Q. Is there a sense among the players about the security?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No, I haven't spoken to anyone. I was just stretching.

Q. Not here, but in general.

LLEYTON HEWITT: No.

Q. Are you more afraid after what happened last year?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really I don't think. You know, I think any human being, it's in their mind, the shock of what happened September 11th last year. I think more so for us, a little bit more, because we've got to fly all the time as well. Sure, it went through your mind I think. I was on the plane when it happened going back to Australia after the US Open. When I had to get on another flight to go over to the European indoors at the end of the year, it goes through your mind a bit more. There's not a whole heap that we can do about it. It's a little bit out of our control.

Q. Regarding Moya, if you get to play him, were you able to glean anything from the past two matches you might be able to use this time?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Not from my behalf really (laughter). I played pretty ordinary in both those matches. I feel like I've got more confidence now than I did in those two matches. It was early on. He played extremely well. My first match on clay, he went through to the final there, beat a lot of good players. It was obviously a tough draw. I'm just going to have to go out there and play my game and stay aggressive with him, you know, not back off at all. You know, if I play -- you know, I'm going to have to play as well as I did in Brazil, in those conditions down there, to beat a guy like Guga. I'm going to have to put in that kind of performance if I'm going to beat Carlos.

Q. Do you like the dynamic of having lost to him twice in a row, you're a bit more hungry, he might be a bit overconfident? Do you sort of like that situation going in?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know. He's going to be pretty confident (laughter). Two straight-set matches on his preferred surface. You know, I won't shy away from the challenge, though, that's for sure. I'll be up for it and I'll be ready if I do have to come up against him.

Q. Do you think because it's the best-of-five here, it can give you an advantage against Moya?

LLEYTON HEWITT: It's hard to say. I don't think it's going to give either one of us. I've played a couple of four setters, he's got through in straight sets so far. He just lost a set I think now. If they go out there and grind all day, you know, five and a half hours, I'd love to see that. That might give me a slight advantage (smiling).

Round 2 L. HEWITT/A. Stoliarov

4-6, 7-6, 6-0, 7-5

Q. From the situation you were in, what turned it around, then, late again in the match when you served for it?

LLEYTON HEWITT: It wasn't pretty tennis out there. I just hung in there. I just called upon sort of my fighting spirit out there and just, you know, hung in there. He's the kind of guy that when you get on a roll and you start winning games in a row, I think you can put a lot together, string of games. When I got back to about 5-2, I started really thinking that I was going to get back in the match and win that second set. Till then, I was rushing, I wasn't taking my time, I wasn't playing every ball on its merits. You know, that sort of got me into that situation. I sort of went back to my B game, the game I know, grinding it out, just sort of fighting for everything out there. That got me back in the match. In Grand Slams, you've got to find a way to get through to the second week, then anything can happen.

Q. What had you been told about him before the match? What did you know about him?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I played him once before, not this San Jose, but the San Jose the year before. He played a lot better this time. I was 6-1, 5-2 up, cruising, ended up losing the second in a breaker, winning in the third. I thought about that match. He came back on me. I felt maybe I'll get back on him. He hit his forehand a lot better than I saw him play it before. Hardly any errors off his forehand. Every time I felt like I pounded it into his forehand, he was able to pull me back across court with his cross-court forehand well. In the end, I started going to his backhand and wait for the short ball.

Q. At one point in the match you began talking to yourself. One thing you said, "Come on, Rock." What's the significance of that?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Actually, Rock is the Rocky movie I watched prior the match. I was sort of drawing on that a little bit at 6-4, 5-Love down. He wasn't the big Russian, but he was Russian out there.

Q. Your next match will be against a player from the Netherlands.

LLEYTON HEWITT: He's still playing.

Q. But he's going well.

LLEYTON HEWITT: You'll back him (smiling)?

Q. I'll back him.

LLEYTON HEWITT: All right.

Q. What do you know about him and what kind of match do you expect?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I've never played him before, but I've practiced a few times with him. He plays well on all surfaces. He's had good results on clay. He's matched it with the best players. I'll have to play a lot better than I've been playing to get past Sjeng, if I'm playing against him. But, you know, I feel like there's a lot of room for improvement in my game. I think I'm capable of doing it. You know, the first few rounds of the US Open, you struggled through them, then got better and better as the tournament went on. Once you've done well in Grand Slams, you start believing different things when you get out there. You don't doubt yourself. That's one thing I can always call upon, you know, the feelings I had back in New York last year.

Q. Was it four or five that you watched?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Rocky IV. It was a Russian. I didn't watch it because of that (laughter). I didn't watch the whole movie.

Q. How long has it been since you saw that one, do you think?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Oh, been a while. Don't even know why I put it on this morning. After breakfast, I was bored. I didn't have my courtesy car for an hour and a half or so. Actually, I fast forwarded it to the good parts.

Q. Have you got it on DVD?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, I actually went out and bought it this week. Yeah, I had one of them, but my computer wasn't -- the Australian version or the European, I couldn't get it to go.

Q. They've given you the lemon prize here. I think they've changed, like, what it stands for.

LLEYTON HEWITT: What's that?

Q. Have you heard about that before?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No idea.

Q. Marcelo Rios usually wins it.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Oh, yeah (laughter). Must be a good award.

Q. You've won it this year. They've changed what it stands for. It now stands for strongest character.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Strongest character?

Q. Yes.

LLEYTON HEWITT: It's called the lemon award. Makes sense (laughter).

Q. You didn't know anything about that?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Didn't have a clue. Who votes?

Q. Some of the French media votes for it each year.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Is it a good thing?

Q. There's an orange prize and a lemon prize.

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know.

Q. Guga won the orange prize and you won the lemon prize.

LLEYTON HEWITT: Over the moon.

Q. You said you were a little nervous. I guess it was difficult to get through the first week here at the French Open. Is it tougher than in another Slam or is it the Slam?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Tougher than?

Q. To get through the first week or is it the same?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Here compared to the US or Wimbledon?

Q. Yes, for you.

LLEYTON HEWITT: No. I think the US Open for me last year was tough to get through the first week, as well. When I got through the first week, I felt like anything can happen. You get in there, you know, you're in the Round of 16, you know you've got to play your best tennis if you're going to win from there on, basically. You're playing against the best 16 players in the world at the time. But, you know, it's hard I think at any Grand Slam, not just the French Open.

Q. It's not the clay or the weather conditions?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really. You know, today was fine. We didn't have any rain delays. Didn't look like rain. The other day when I played -- it's tough here because obviously if you play on hard court or grass, it starts raining, then you're straight off, whereas on clay you've got to deal with it a little bit more.

Q. Was there ever a time when he got on that run today, eight games in a row, you thought it was getting beyond you or getting to a dangerous stage for you? Obviously two sets to love down, you were in trouble.

LLEYTON HEWITT: You know, it's always going to be tough. No, I didn't doubt myself. I was actually thinking about the Canas match here last year in the Round of 16 when I was down two sets to Love against a guy -- wouldn't be too many guys coming back against Canas two sets to Love. If it would have went that way, I would have drawn some confidence and strength from that. I still believed I was able to win. Obviously, I wasn't hitting the ball great at all. The first set I felt like I was in so many of his service games, I couldn't quite get a breakpoint. I just felt it was a matter of time. He didn't have the biggest game out there. I felt like I was always going to be in both my service games and his.

Q. You said that your game had to improve a bit if you were going to win. How much more do you think it needs to improve and what particular areas?

LLEYTON HEWITT: A little bit of everything, I think. But it's something that with me I think it can switch, you know, overnight. I can go out there and just turn it on. I keep talking about the US Open, but that's the way it happened. I went out there, I was a set down to Tommy Haas, came back the next day and played great. From then on, I just played the best tennis of my life. I think sometimes in Slams, the first few rounds are the toughest to get through. Guga last year had match points down against Russell. After that, he went on to destroy everyone. I think mentally the first few rounds are extremely tough.

Round 1 Lleyton defeats Andre Sa 7-5 6-4 7-5

Q. How much was that match an indication of your form right now?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know. Felt like it was tough conditions out there today. You know, one minute I felt like I was getting burned out there, the next minute I was ready to come off because it was getting too heavy with the rain. I felt like the court was extremely heavier, and Suzanne Lenglen in the past I think has been a lot slower than the other courts here anyway.

Q. Was the opposition more demanding than you expected?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No. I've seen him play before. He qualified in Monte-Carlo and actually beat Gaston Gaudio in the last round of quallies. I wasn't underestimating him going in. I watched some of that match, thought he played extremely well. Two weeks after that Gaudio won Barcelona and the other tournament, whatever he played. I can't remember. Yeah, I didn't underestimate him at all.

Q. Just on the conditions again. How much difference do you think it makes to your game, again when it's hot and damp?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know. Not a huge difference, I don't think. Just for me to adjust a little bit, it takes, just depending on the day, a little bit more time out there, just to get the feel of the conditions. I don't think it makes a big difference.

Q. How much improvement do you feel there is in your game? Where do you think you can make it to?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I think I can get a lot better. I felt like, you know, I started playing pretty well in Hamburg a couple of weeks ago. You know, I didn't play the best match against Safin. After that I actually felt like I played well. I played against Pavel and Novak there, and Novak had been in pretty good form. I feel like, you know, you have to try to get through the first few rounds here. If you can keep it going, you know, try and sneak in the second week, then anything can happen. You can hit form at any stage. I think we saw that at the US Open.

Q. What difference do you think your preparation will make in terms of having the week off beforehand? Do you feel fresher than in the past?
LLEYTON HEWITT: It's hard to say. We'll wait and see how I go. But I've enjoyed just practicing here, you know, chilling out, not doing much. You know, it's different preparation. I really didn't have a choice to make this year about Dusseldorf or not. I really like going to Dusseldorf and playing there but, you know, due to Pat not playing this year, it was pretty tough to get there. Yeah, I had a week off before the US Open last year and did pretty well there, so I don't think it's going to make a huge difference.

Q. You could play Bjorkman in the next round. What can you say about playing him on clay?

LLEYTON HEWITT: I played him first round Rome. He's a different kind of player on clay compared with a lot of guys that you're going to play. You know, he tries to attack a lot more. You know, he's not going to stay back and rally as much. He serve-volleys. He mixes it up well. I think he's getting better on clay. A couple years ago he was trying to play too much like a clay court specialist, which I think he has sort of thrown that out of the window a little bit more now and trying to play his own game and make it work as best he can play. He's had pretty good results. He's pushed some good players the last weeks on clay.

Q. Comment on Stoliarov, his opponent.

LLEYTON HEWITT: I don't know a whole heap about him. I played him once in San Jose about a year and a half ago now in the early rounds there. I won't be taking it lightly, no matter who I play.

Q. Do you think you've become a better player on clay now since a year ago?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Yeah, it's tough when you don't put your clay court shoes on for 10 months a year, then whack 'em on. I feel like it takes me more time to get used to the clay court surface and get better on it. It's tough when all these -- most of these other guys grow up on this surface. They're used to sliding, the tactics and strategy of playing on clay, whereas I have to change it a little bit. It takes me a little bit more time. The more matches I get under the belt, the better off and the more comfortable I feel.

Q. Going back to today's match, was there any point in it in particular where you thought the game turned in your favor?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Not really. It was very up and down I felt like the whole match. I felt in control of it, you know, most of the time out there. You know, I was a bit unlucky. I felt like I could have run away with the third set, at 2-1, 40-30. A dead net cord, hit a line. Didn't sort of go in my favor from then on. You know, I lost my serve, then lost the break. I was able just to keep holding serve until I got my chance at 5-All in the third set.

Q. Is there anything you find about this surface that particularly challenges you and your game?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No, not really. You know, not something I can single out, I don't think.

Q. How did it come about that you'll be playing doubles with Tim Henman?

LLEYTON HEWITT: What's that?

Q. Are you playing doubles with Tim Henman?

LLEYTON HEWITT: Here?

Q. Yes.

LLEYTON HEWITT: No.

Q. Are you playing doubles?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No. I don't know, maybe he signed me in (laughter). I'm not aware of it.

Q. Are you playing mixed doubles?

LLEYTON HEWITT: No, nothing, mate.