"There were many difficult moments during the last eight years of her training. We always had to get the best out of the defeats. Some of the matches she lost to Saina were really painful. I had Saina so much analysed that I hated it when she lost to her," Ravis, who has been involved with the Spanish national set up since 2004, starting immediately after the Athens Olympics, said.
Ravis said it was the men's doubles gold medal match at Beijing Olympics which motivated him a lot.
"It was very hard to begin it. Yesterday I was watching the men's doubles match where Kido was playing. He doesn't know but Kido and Hendra Sitiawan winning the gold medal at the Beijing Olympics final inspired me a lot to be willing to work as hard as I needed to be sitting at the chair in an Olympic final. So that was the match which made me have the hunger, grit, passion and perseverance to work everyday to realise this dream," he said.
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Asked about the decline of Chinese badminton, Ravis said: "I think they have been too good for too long and when you are too good for too long you don't question your methods, may be they need more time to realise that."
Asked about the match, Ravis said: "It was pressure. She is a human being and she was feeling pressure. She has emotions and some of them are negative. She was playing a wrong tactical game but she eventually managed to win the trump match against Ashwini."
Talking about his journey, Ravis said: "I saw a potential champion when I saw her as 13 years old. We got lucky that her parents allowed her to go to National centre and I could shape her according to my coaching philosophy. I always believed that we can deliver. So I have been studying a lot to be far ahead of her badminton knowledge and so that I can give good coaching. I think all credit should go to her."