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Thread: Tennis Forever

  1. #961
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber VinodKumar's's Avatar
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    Roger annanuku ithula rendu parcel pannunga ...

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  3. #962
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    Superb analysis. He serve volleyed 6 times in the first set and a half and converted 5 out of 6! That's an incredible success rate against Nadal who punishes anybody who comes to the net. Mixing it up well is what Fed tried to do all these years but always failed in the execution.

  4. #963
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber venkkiram's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by VinodKumar's View Post
    Roger annanuku ithula rendu parcel pannunga ...
    அப்படியே பார்சல் அனுப்பிட்டாலும்!
    சொல்லிச் சொல்லி ஆறாது சொன்னா துயர் தீராது...

  5. #964
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber venkkiram's Avatar
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    Same kind of analysis appeared when Djokovic started winning against Nadal and it became a show for some years / some grand slam finals. Anyway, the year 2014 and 15 will tell us more about where Stanimal stands and delivers.
    சொல்லிச் சொல்லி ஆறாது சொன்னா துயர் தீராது...

  6. #965
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber venkkiram's Avatar
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    By the way, the comments section of that analysis has lot of interesting insights from many. Good time pass.
    சொல்லிச் சொல்லி ஆறாது சொன்னா துயர் தீராது...

  7. #966
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    . ATP site is a good one. Their professional standards are quite high.
    Quote Originally Posted by venkkiram View Post
    அப்படியே பார்சல் அனுப்பிட்டாலும்!

  8. #967
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    Ada paavigala 17 granddslam-la kedaikadha perumaya davis cupla kedaikka pogudhu!

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-01-2...wrinka/5221622

    "Giant," headlined Le Matin, including a signed poster of the player inside a 14-page spread dedicated to the triumph of the native of Saint-Barthelemy, a village which was renamed "Stan-Barthelemy" by its mayor after the victory.

  9. #968
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    STATISTICS
    Stan's Rankings Rise Is Biggest In 10 Years
    Wawrinka's Rapid Rise

    by Greg Sharko
    |

    28.01.2014


    ATP stats and information guru Greg Sharko looks at the numbers behind Stanislas Wawrinka's run to his first Grand Slam title at the Australian Open.

    RANKING JUMPERS IN TOP 10

    Wawrinka climbed from No. 8 to No. 3 in the Emirates ATP Rankings following his biggest career title. He is the first player to move at least five spots within in the Top 10 since Andre Agassi and Tommy Haas after the Internazionali BNL d'Italia in May 2002. Here are the players who have jumped at least five spots within the Top 10 after a tournament title in the past 24 years in chronological order:
    Player

    Ranking Jump

    Tournament
    Stanislas Wawrinka

    +5 (No. 8 to No. 3)

    2014 Australian Open
    Andre Agassi

    +6 (No. 9 to No. 3)

    2002 Rome
    Tommy Haas

    +5 (No. 7 to No. 2)

    2002 Rome (finalist)
    Marat Safin

    +5 (No. 7 to No. 2)

    2000 US Open
    Yevgeny Kafelnikov

    +7 (No. 10 to No. 3)

    1999 Australian Open
    Petr Korda

    +5 (No. 7 to No. 2)

    1998 Australian Open
    Goran Ivanisevic

    +5 (No. 9 to No. 4)

    1997 Vienna
    Andre Agassi

    +5 (No. 7 to No. 2)

    1994 Paris (Bercy)
    Jim Courier

    +5 (No. 9 to No. 4)

    1991 Roland Garros

    OLDEST FIRST-TIME GRAND SLAM TITLE WINNERS

    Wawrinka is the fifth-oldest first-time singles Grand Slam champion in the Open Era (since 1968). Here is a look at the Top 10 oldest winners:
    Player

    Age

    Tournament

    Previous Best Slam Result
    Stanislas Wawrinka
    28

    2014 Australian Open

    SF - 2013 US Open
    Goran Ivanisevic
    29

    2001 Wimbledon

    Finalist - Wimbledon (3 times)
    Petr Korda
    30

    1998 Australian Open

    Finalist - 1992 Roland Garros
    Andres Gomez
    30

    1990 Roland Garros

    QF - Five times (3 RG, 1 W, 1 USO)
    Andres Gimeno
    34

    1972 Roland Garros

    Finalist - 1969 Australian Open

    WAWRINKA AGAINST TOP 10 OPPONENTS

    Last season, Wawrinka won a career-high nine matches against Top 10 opponents and at the Australian Open he defeated three Top 10 rivals in a tournament for the first time. He began last year with an 0-4 record against Top 10 competition before securing his first win at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters in April. Since that time, Wawrinka is 12-8 against the Top 10 during that stretch and he's defeated every opponent he's played. (He has not faced del Potro, Federer.) Here is the breakdown since April 2013:
    Rank

    Player

    W-L
    1)
    Rafael Nadal

    1-4
    2)
    Novak Djokovic

    1-3
    5)
    David Ferrer

    2-0
    6)
    Andy Murray

    2-0
    7) Tomas Berdych 4-0
    9) Richard Gasquet 1-0
    10)
    Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

    1-1

    -With assistance from Joanna Mather

    http://www.atpworldtour.com/News/Ten...tatistics.aspx

  10. #969
    Senior Member Platinum Hubber ajithfederer's Avatar
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    Why I wanted to boo Nadal too

    Charles Happell

    Written on Tuesday, 28 January 2014 20:24

    I was at Melbourne Park for the men's final on Sunday and, to all those sanctimonious types who've wailed about the crowd's heckling of Rafael Nadal, I must say I felt exactly the same way as the boo-boys.

    I'd been mesmerised by Stan Wawrinka's play over the first set and a bit. It was tennis of the most sublime quality - backhand winners peeled off down the line, crunching off forehand winners - that rendered Nadal's power game almost impotent.

    The crowd had turned up hoping for some sort of contest - anything but the straight-sets bore-athon which had been predicted by just about every expert - and they were loving the way Wawrinka was, in his first Grand Slam final, totally dismantling the world No.1 and raging favourite.

    Here was a sporting moment that every underdog-loving Australian could revel in: a no-hoper - tennis' Buster Douglas - playing the match of his life to give the world champ not just a bloody nose but a standing count from the ref.

    I was actually, by some ticketing quirk, sitting in Row A, right in the corner of the court, above the Chinese characters that apparently denote the ANZ Bank. Close enough to feel the hoardings reverberate every time a Wawrinka serve crashed into the signage just below me; close enough to see the despair on Nadal's face as his opponent bullied and bossed him around the court in a way that few, if any, players have done before.

    When Nadal came back on to the court after his medical time out, at 1-2 in the second set, he walked towards the ball boy just below me to collect a handful of balls, his brow furrowed even more deeply than usual as boos echoed around the stadium. He couldn't seem to comprehend the crowd reaction: they're booing me?

    Four nights earlier, I'd seen the usually imperturbable Roger Federer feel aggrieved enough at Nadal's antics to complain to chair umpire Jake Garner about the Spaniard's grunting and time-wasting.

    Channel Seven flashed up a stat at one stage of that match, indicating Nadal was taking an average of 28 seconds betweeen points on his service, Federer 20 seconds, the maximum time permissible under ATP rules. So why was Nadal allowed eight seconds longer than everyone else? And why isn't he more regularly called out on that?

    Federer wanted to know as much, calling on weak offials to clamp down on the Spaniard's serial gamesmanship.

    He later said Nadal had been given just two time violations in the 33 times they'd met, covering 80 hours or more of tennis. Two measly violations. - What bull shit is this!!

    Which is why I felt Eva Asderaki, the Greek chair umpire during Nadal's round-four match against Kei Nishikori, deserved some sort of Australia Day medal. There was Nadal serving, with the third set locked at 4-4 and deuce, and taking his usual interminable time between points when Ms Asderaki piped up: ''Time violation, Mr Nadal'', meaning the gobsmacked world No.1 had to forfeit his first serve.


    For me, an absolutely priceless moment that should feature in any tournament highlights package.

    (Just to illustrate how Team Nadal doesn't get it, uncle Toni later told Spanish radio it would be better if umpires were drawn from a pool of former players who knew what it was like to be out on court in a pressure situation. "We had a problem with a girl (Asderaki)," uncle Toni gallantly explained to the interviewer.) - . Dayyy just coach your nephew don't try to set game rules.

    Nadal's flirtation with gamesmanship - bolder commentators (of the sort you don't tend to find in the Seven commentary booth) might go so far as to call it cheating - has been going on for years.

    Here's the start of a piece in the New York magazine from July 2011 about the very same subject:

    ''Rafael Nadal is in acute distress. He's just lost the game, he's facing a momentum-defining tiebreaker, and his opponent has his second wind. Rafa's just hit yet another impossible shot from an impossible angle, and one foot seems to have borne all the acrobatic brunt. He's in deep crouch, trying to gauge the extent and implications of the pain. Then he heads to his chair and calls for the trainer; the tiebreaker will have to wait; his opponent, oozing adrenaline, will have to cool his heels. After a tense interlude during which his opponent, visibly upset, remonstrates with the umpire to restart, Nadal returns, takes the tiebreaker, and romps. The press waits with bated breath to hear the results of the MRI — will he be able to carry on and defend his title? The results show nothing of any concern, and Nadal smashes his next opponent in four sets, fresh as a daisy...''

    That account of Nadal seeking medical attention mid-match took place during his fourth-round US Open victory over Juan Martin del Potro. After days of speculation about the Spaniard's injury, he dismissed Mardy Fish in the next round, telling reporters that he was using a heavy anesthetic to numb the pain in his foot.

    Yet that sequence of events could have been from any number of Nadal matches in the past five years. In 2010 at Wimbledon, in the third round against Germany's Philipp Petzschner, Nadal was trailing by two sets to one. Petzschner, as anyone who was watching the game could see, was in the zone and serving bombs that Nadal was simply not able to get a racquet on. - No wonder he calls for lesser fast courts!!

    Nadal called for the trainer several times on the way to a hard-fought five-set victory yet never appeared injured, a tactic his opponent characterized after the match as "pretty clever." He did the same thing to disrupt Federer's rhythm during the first set of the 2011 French Open final. In each instance the timing was impeccable, and unsportsmanlike.

    So that's was the backdrop to Nadal's injury time out against Wawrinka on Sunday night. That was the reason for the crowd's booing. That was why Wawrinka went ballistic in his courtside seat, berating the chair umpire and gesticulating to uncle Toni and Team Nadal sitting across from him in the stands. - Well done Wawrinka

    Those who follow the sport for longer than two weeks a year - the ones being derided by Angela Pippos in the New Daily, Cameron Tomarchio in the Herald Sun and Will Brodie in Fairfax as ignorant and boorish - understood exactly what was happening.

    That this was Nadal's tried-and-tested fallback position, his modus operandi, when his opponent has all the momentum and he needs to do something to stall proceedings and win himself back some breathing time.

    The Swiss player clearly felt he was being duped as well, complaining to chair umpire Carlos Ramos that he deserved an explanation about the nature of Nadal's injury.

    The crowd picked up on Wawrinka's annoyance and started slow hand-clapping the Spaniard who was still doing whatever he was doing underneath the Rod Laver stands.

    And then when Nadal finally appeared, well that's when they gave it to him with both barrels.

    Critics have labelled the booing of Nadal as un-Australian. Yet this concept of what constitutes 'Australian' and 'un-Australian' behaviour - nebulous at the best of times - is now so blurred as to be rendered utterly meaningless.

    This country's cricket fans booed England's Stuart Broad for two whole months this summer for doing what every Australian Test cricketer (with one notable exception) has been doing since Ian Chappell had sideburns: not walking after edging a catch. So is that Australian or un-Australian behaviour?

    What Australians don't like (if I can indulge in a little racial stereotyping here myself) is shysters and conmen.

    And they felt on Sunday night that they - and Wawrinka - were being conned. -

    The Swiss blew him off the court in the first set and then broke him to love in the opening game of the second set (have a look at that on YouTube if you want to see a small slice of tennis perfection) and suddenly Rafa starts grimacing in pain and clutching at his back.

    Well that's mighty convenient, isn't it?

    Of course he was hobbled by the back complaint but cynics will wonder just how badly. Will he, for example, front up next week, as bright as a button, claiming the back problem was just a momentary spasm and everything is A-OK now? That he's taken a 'heavy aneasthetic to numb the pain'. We'll see.

    Nadal is a wonderful champion and gracious winner, always heaping praise on his vanquished opponent. It's this descent into gamesmanship when he's losing, though, which is threatening to become a blot on his career.

    http://www.backpagelead.com.au/index...-boo-nadal-too
    Last edited by ajithfederer; 8th February 2014 at 11:24 AM.

  11. #970
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    Pretty scathing stuff. Hard to argue with, though. Not to be discriminatory, but Spaniards have a fine track record of gamesmanship. I remember years back a bitter Davis Cup final in which USA (I think) accused Spain of cheating (final was played in Spain IIRC). People are going to pin him down more and more for these strategic breaks because there seems to be a pattern. And IF indeed he gets injured, again, he shouldn't complain so much about fast courts or ridicule the Sampras era as boring which he did.

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