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Ernests Gulbis has lived up to his billing as one of the biggest personalities at Wimbledon. Photo: AFP

Millionaire Ernests Gulbis serves up parting shots

No joy on court for Latvian but his press conferences, encompassing vampires, gambling and fine art, have been lively

From vampires to gambling and fine art, Ernests Gulbis offered a bizarre insight into the life of a millionaire Latvian tennis star in his brief Wimbledon foray, which ended with a second-round defeat by Sergiy Stakhovsky.

The French Open semi-finalist may not have delivered on the court this week, falling 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 against the Ukrainian who accounted for Roger Federer at the same stage last year, but the world No 10 lived up to his billing as one of the biggest personalities off it.

The 25-year-old started his post-match media call by angrily denying reports that he had gambled away all his French Open earnings at a blackjack table.

Next day in Latvia, they say I lost all my winnings. My mother sent me a message asking [if] maybe I'm a little bit crazy, but I'm not stupid
Ernests Gulbis

"People try to take words out of context, and sometimes they even dream something together. Of course, I went to play blackjack, but there was no word on how much I won or how much I lost," he said, adding that he had joked in a one-on-one interview that he had lost "a lot".

"Next day in Latvia, they say I lost all my winnings. My mother sent me a message asking [if] maybe I'm a little bit crazy, but I'm not stupid."

The 12th seed's exchange with reporters came two days after another press conference, at which he misheard a question about umpires and proceeded to talk about vampires as metaphor for people he believes to be sucking energy out of the game.

Asked whether his comments had received attention in the locker room, Gulbis joked that he had no friends on tour.

But former women's world No 1 Victoria Azarenka revealed on Tuesday that she and Gulbis are good friends who discuss fine art - a claim the Latvian says is only half the story. "She didn't tell you how she lost to me at table tennis?" he joked. "She bragged all evening about how good she is, but then I showed her who is the true table tennis champion."

And the fine art?

"We just touched on the subject," Gulbis said. "We have a lot more interesting stuff to discuss, but it's not for the press."

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Millionaire serves up parting shots
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