Monica Puig eyeing Grand Slam success after Olympic run
The Puerto Rican world number 34 believes Olympic success has set the platform for a major victory in the not-too-distant future.
Monica Puig’s Rio gold medal was an unlikely but fully-deserved win for the world number 34, catapulting her to hero status and making her a role model for young people in the island Commonwealth that is enduring tough economic times.
Now Puig wants to capitalise on her victory, both on and off the court.
"The Olympics was a grand slam"
"I know that there's no doubt in my mind that I can probably win a grand slam because the Olympics was one," she told Reuters at Flushing Meadows on Sunday, on the eve of the US Open. "It just doesn't have the title grand slam but the best players in the world were there, including Serena. I won the biggest thing on my to-do list and I just want to keep knocking off other ones, and that would be to win a grand slam."
Confident but at-ease despite all the new-found attention, Puig is still coming to terms with her stunning victory in Rio. "I don't think it's really sunk in," she said. "It's a little bit difficult to process. I was by no means the favourite. It was such a surreal ride."
In floods of tears during the medal ceremony, Puig and her gold medal have been virtually inseparable ever since.
"Surreal feeling"
"I remember waking up several times in the middle of the night and just looking at my night stand to actually see if my medal was there because I didn't believe it," she said. "I wasn't able to sleep very much for three, four or five days. It was the most surreal feeling in the world to be an Olympic champion that morning."
Along with congratulations from her fellow players, Puig has been subjected to abuse on social media, with many people expecting a let-down at the US Open, where she faces Saisai Zheng of China in the first round.
"Unfortunately I'm guilty of reading my Twitter and sometimes the comments under articles but you know what, a lot of that fuels my fire," she said.
"Nothing is ever impossible"
"The message is that nothing is ever impossible. People probably thought me winning a medal was impossible and I proved them wrong."
Not surprisingly, Puig says she will have a special role in the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.
"They have approached me to be flag-bearer," she said. "They've already asked me about the possibility of doing it in 2020 and there's no way I could say no."