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The Hitch said:And many believe in a non doping world contador would still win gts. But the reality is we live in the doping world, not the other one.
the guy is so pumped up when he plays.Andynonomous said:Funny how Nadal only has his OCD/manerisms when he is playing.
Looks a LOT more like stimulants to me.
Jim Courier too.sniper said:the guy is so pumped up when he plays.
haven't seen anything similar.
some come/came close (hewitt, muster, etc.) to showing similar agression and nervy manerisms, but still nadal is by far the worse in that respect.
i woulnd't be at all surprised if his being so pumped up is due to stimulants.
true.blackcat said:Jim Courier too.
imo, Lendl was the one who started it.
Nike had an ad with Courier, watching him haul a heavy wheeler truck tire on an grass pitch with that rope and belt to the 100kg tire.sniper said:true.
i was never a fan of any of those players, neither in terms of playing style nor in terms of their character (except perhaps courrier, who i think was always a gentlemen on court and did have a spectacular baseball forehand).
yeah, nike has a thing for dopers.blackcat said:Nike had an ad with Courier, watching him haul a heavy wheeler truck tire on an grass pitch with that rope and belt to the 100kg tire.
it is a little like Armstrong "cycling" on a snowy mountain, then going back for a second ascent. What are you on? I'm on my bike <strikethru> soccer pitch tire trawling
sniper said:yeah, nike has a thing for dopers.
courier and agassi were first of a kind: the heavy returners.
as soon as these guys took over the beautiful classical serve-volley type of players of the likes of stefan edberg where never to be seen again.
true, though guys like ivanisevic, krajicek and sampras compensated with heavy serves.thrawn said:Happened well after Courier, and right at the end of Agassi's career. Rafter, Goran etc. were still successful until the early 2000's.
the sceptic said:Who knows, maybe Federer is the Riis of tennis?![]()
SeriousSam said:the Riis of X - someone who wouldn't be near the top in X if everyone was clean
in that case, Federer is not a likely candidate to be the Riis of tennis.SeriousSam said:the Riis of X - someone who wouldn't be near the top in X if everyone was clean
this cannot be discarded (no negative proof), but again, people who follow the sport and have doping awareness (e.g. the people who post in here) seem to think that prize goes to others, like Nadal.djpbaltimore said:Or alternatively, someone who pushed the limits of doping to brand new levels not previously seen in the sport.
sniper said:in that case, Federer is not a likely candidate to be the Riis of tennis.
His talent is hardly up for discussion.
this cannot be discarded (no negative proof), but again, people who follow the sport and have doping awareness (e.g. the people who post in here) seem to think that prize goes to others, like Nadal.
when federer became nr. 1, there wasn't anything particularly suspicious or unusual about his appearance/perfomance from a physical point of view, although admittedly he was always very fit and demonstrated some of the finest footwork ever seen in the game.
but still very much unlike nadal, murray, djoker whom we can all see undergo physical transformations and combine it with unearthly endurance.
my verdict: federer doper? check. federer the riis of tennis? no way.
The Hitch said:bernhard kohls performancws were within the realm of possibility. More so than federers even. So were Sayers and that of many others.
HappyCycling said:. . . but what I am saying is some things in Tennis are heavily reliant on particular innate attributes which any degree of doping might not help improve.
A good example of this is Fabrice Santoro, and I am pretty much sure he never doped.
zebedee said:And he never got anywhere either.
You're trotting out that same old myth - that there's no doping in tennis because it's skill that decides matches - peddled time and again by fans as well as the old fart who heads up anti-doping at the ITF.
As a matter of fact, there is absolutely nothing in tennis that doping could not improve. In fact tennis is a perfect sport for doping - fast paced bursts and short recovery times present optimum conditions for steroids which have long-lasting effects and can be taken well away from competition.
Tennis is horribly doped.
That is a bit of a distraction though. What the "baseline" point is arguing is that the talent pool for tennis is lower because there is a talent requirement. But you also have to consider that tennis is a far more popular sport so there are way more participants to begin with.SundayRider said:I agree with you to a point however. Unless you have the baseline of good skills (developed over years and years) the doping will get you absolutely nowhere. This in contrast to a sport like cycling (and sports like triathlon, running) where the skill aspect is almost non existent - Froome on a bike is a good example of this.
zebedee said:And he never got anywhere either.
You're trotting out that same old myth - that there's no doping in tennis because it's skill that decides matches - peddled time and again by fans as well as the old fart who heads up anti-doping at the ITF.
As a matter of fact, there is absolutely nothing in tennis that doping could not improve. In fact tennis is a perfect sport for doping - fast paced bursts and short recovery times present optimum conditions for steroids which have long-lasting effects and can be taken well away from competition.
Tennis is horribly doped.
The Hitch said:That is a bit of a distraction though. What the "baseline" point is arguing is that the talent pool for tennis is lower because there is a talent requirement. But you also have to consider that tennis is a far more popular sport so there are way more participants to begin with.
There are also more ways to dope in tennis. Speed, endurance, stamina, upper body strength, injury recovery. In cycling it's just the stamina really.
zebedee said:And he never got anywhere either.
You're trotting out that same old myth - that there's no doping in tennis because it's skill that decides matches - peddled time and again by fans as well as the old fart who heads up anti-doping at the ITF.
As a matter of fact, there is absolutely nothing in tennis that doping could not improve. In fact tennis is a perfect sport for doping - fast paced bursts and short recovery times present optimum conditions for steroids which have long-lasting effects and can be taken well away from competition.
Tennis is horribly doped.
HappyCycling said:Depends what you define as "somewhere". He made a lot of money, is considered a legend in the game, incredibly talented and now commentates for various broadcasters.
Also I never for one second suggested tennis is drug free. I know its a plague on the ATP tour, I have no rose tinted spectacles on this topic. All I was pointing out is the distortion and gains made in tennis doping aren't as directly impacting on a pure endurance sport such as Cycling.