Customer Reviews
A wonderful book filled with insights into a Champions mind!! 
2008-08-12
What a wonderful book. I could read a section about a match and want to pull out a tape and watch the match over because the book explained what Pete was feeling as he went through the match. Also, it was so interesting to read about how he was feeling during the many emotional times times in his life. The book shows us a Sampras that we rarely saw on the court.
I thoroughly enjoyed the book and recommend it to everyone, not just tennis fans.
Pete Sampras Audio book 
2008-08-12
The audio book I purchased by Pete Sampras called A Champion's Mind was a great price and in great condition. It has been very enjoyable to listen to. I couldn't get over the reasonable price and how quickly I received it!
Pete Sampras King of Swing 
2008-08-09
Pete Sampras - A Champions Mind was truly an amazing experience. Sampras lets you into his heart & mind and once you start reading his autobiography you just cannot put this book down. He really deserved more
respect than what he had received. I truly recommend this book to everyone, especially up and coming young athletes. Sampras was born with TALENT and was a true Gentleman but hard work is what made him a true Champion.
A fan's mind: Lessons learned 
2008-08-06
Pete Sampras' "A Champion's Mind" is indeed a 15th grand slam.
It never ceases to amaze me how generally people that move quiet, are soft spoken and calm are, turn to be the best writers, authors and talkers. Sampras' may have got a bit of help from his editor, but still it is impressive how relaxing and smooth this book can be... pretty much as his tennis was.
It is an interesting read that I recommend not only to tennis fans but also to people that are into knowing what is it that spins around the brain of successful people: from their first steps, through their growth, their falls, their peaks and finally their retirement. Pete basically gets naked on subjetcs as his family, coaches, trainers, friends, competitors, basically everything he never talked about during his days on the tour.
Another fun point worth every penny is Sampras' sarcastic sense of humour. Sometimes I felt I was reading something written by Conan O'Brien or David Letterman. Probably it is because as I said earlier you have this serious, non-emotional guy telling you this unexpected line at a very uptight situation. One example is what Sampras thought when he met Bridgette Wilson (whoever read the book will know what I'm taking about).
Objetive and no auto-flattering behavior, Sampras shows respect for himself, his peers and his predecesors as well as the new school of tennis players. One thing I would really like to ask Pete is why he placed Ivan Lendl as one of the GOAT, instead of perhaps the one player people relate him most -Pancho Gonzales-; the others named I agree. From my read, it seemed like Sampras had a bit more of respect for Lendl because of Ivan being so friendly and helpful to him during his first days on the tours. Who knows. After all, a few chapters into the book you realize that Pete is human, has a heart, has feelings and emotions, and may be a little subjective at times. Yet I wouldn't argue with him as I'm not even a Pro Tennis Player.
A Champion's Mind deserves 5 stars and no less, because it delivers what it says and it delivers what people would always expect from Pete Sampras: nothing else but 100% high quality.
It is as he is 
2008-08-05
This is a regurgitation of Pete Sampras' career as he saw it. This is not an in depth analysis. For example, no mention of his first two girlfriends that traveled with him extensively. Nor, is it substantially in depth on match play, a point her or there but generally an overview of the match with many matches in important tournaments skipped completely.
But what this book does perfectly is a general perspective of Pete's influences, how he developed and also how hurt he was by some of what the press said. How would you like to turn the TV on and listen to an announcer call your wife the Yoko Ono of tennis?
What comes through loud and clear is this is a class, quiet guy with a passion and ability for tennis. And that was enough for him. Unfortunately, it was not enough for Connors and McEnroe who at different times felt they needed to take shots at him.
Now, I must admit I am a big Pete Sampras fan so maybe the bar is lower for me. But reading the flow of his development and career, his great parental influence, and the setting of his career makes this a worthwhile book if you have any interest in tennis at all. I strongly recommend this book for tennis fans.
Great life a super star! 
2008-08-04
Pete Sampras is arguably the greatest tennis player ever, a man whose hard-nosed work ethic led to an unprecedented number one world ranking for 286 weeks, and whose prodigious talent made possible a record-setting fourteen Grand Slam titles. While his more vocal rivals sometimes grabbed the headlines, Pete always preferred to let his racket do the talking.
Until now.
In
A Champion’s Mind, the tennis great who so often exhibited visible discomfort with letting people “inside his head” finally opens up. An athletic prodigy, Pete resolved from his earliest playing days never to let anything get in the way of his love for the game. But while this single-minded determination led to tennis domination, success didn’t come without a price. The constant pressure of competing on the world’s biggest stage—in the unblinking eye of a media machine hungry for more than mere athletic greatness—took its toll.
Here for the first time Pete speaks freely about what it was like to possess what he calls “the Gift.” He writes about the personal trials he faced—including the death of a longtime coach and confidant—and the struggles he gutted his way through while being seemingly on top of the world. Among the book’s most riveting scenes are an early devastating loss to Stefan Edberg that led Pete to make a monastic commitment to delivering on his natural talent; a grueling, four-hour-plus match against Alex Corretja during which Pete became seriously ill; fierce on-court battles with rival and friend Andre Agassi; and the triumphant last match of Pete’s career at the finals of the 2002 U.S. Open.
In
A Champion’s Mind, one of the most revered, successful, and intensely private players in the history of tennis offers an intimate look at the life of an elite athlete.
Frank and revealing 
2008-07-31
This book is everything most sports autobiographies are not. It's well written, interesting, revealing and honest. The title says it all - the reader is taken on a journey into the mind of a champion. It might be debatable whether Sampras was the most talented player of his generation but it is undisputed that he made the most of what he had, and this book shows you how he did it.
Sampras doesn't engage in any false modesty, cheap shots, boring self-promotion or irrelevant ramblings. He takes to the task of writing about his life in tennnis with the focus, skill and execution that befits a man who was the world's #1 ranked tennis player for 6 straight years.
I haven't read a better sports autobiography.
Amazingly in depth! 
2008-07-29
This book was by far the greatest tennis book i have read yet. It sends not only a message to tennis players about the physical aspect of the game, but the tremendous mentality you must posess in order to make it to where Pete did. He did a great job of laying that on the table and i believe this book can help out even our top notch players today by taking a look at the game through Petes great career. He doesnt try to beat around the bush or be modest, he tells it how it is and i think many will benefit from that. This is a great book not for just Sampras fans, but anybody looking to taking their game to the next and most important step; getting the mentality down. It helps you look at things differently on and off the court to better yourself. Would recommend to anyone!
A truly great story 
2008-07-28
Pete Sampras is the best tennis player in the history of tennis to this day. This book reveals his life in ways he never showed publicly as a player. It is truly a great story. He was a shy boy with a lot of potential that worked incredibly hard to be the best in the world. Managing his professional and personal life was one of the keys for his success. There are a lot of behaviors that can be learned to be disciplined from this book. I recommend it to everyone looking to be succesful in life.
Pete hits an ace 
2008-07-26
I am a fan of Pete Sampras, so I enjoyed this book and got to see some insight into his life. He gives great details about certain big matches, and his coaches. The only criticism, and this is a very minor criticism, is he did not go into his personal life that much, he pretty much wrote only about his tennis life. One answer to that is tennis was his life. I believe this i one ofthe better bio books on tennis players.