the sceptic said:probably a pretty significant amount of luck involved too. I mean, painting the lines for 4 sets isn't a skill. Some days he will miss a higher % of those winner and suddenly Djokovic wins in 5.
edit: I don't mean it's all luck, but when you play with really small margins you can't really control if you're hitting winners or errors.
SeriousSam said:There isn't some magical drug that allows you to paint the line when otherwise the ball goes out, although reduced fatigue makes it easier to maintain concentration, which is something the big players have exploited with doping for a long time now, no one more than Djokovic and Nadal. It's luck and keeping a cool head.
the question is what kind of PED allowed him to play the 'first strike' card so successfully yesterday.robow7 said:Stan hit out today, he knew he couldn't rally all day with Djoker and tactically it's called first strike tennis, meaning the first ball that you have any chance to go for an out right winner, you take it but that's not what any player likes to do, too high risk. That's a testament to Djoker's defensive skills, consistency and court coverage, If Stan is on, he looks brilliant but if the timing is off even a hair, you roll up unforced errors by the basket full and bow out. Stan rolled the dice and won today, but no human can do this day in and day out and you may see him go out in the quarters at the next tourney.
seems from those gifs, i have not seen the game, all were right in Stan's hitting zone, about 3.5-4 feet high, not too high for Stan's drives. now, I know the paradox, the sample fallacy, i may only be seeing a slither of the rallies from Nole, but i wonder why he could not play a ball with more topspin in the game. I guess even the best cannot switch their game up to such degree, and Nole presumed his A game could match Stan's A game, and to go to an entirely different game which was not his regular defense was flawed from the outset, better play the A game with the defense tweaked. certainly Nadal would have been making Stan play the ball at 5feet and higher, makes it impossible to drive the ball, unless you catch it when it is risingAndynonomous said:Stan won the French Open via offence first. This is VERY unusual, because the slow red clay lends itself primarily to defence (the reason Nadal has dominated over the years).
This "offence first" strategy, only works when the player is VERY accurate on the day.
See this thread for examples of Wawrinka's powerful shots (wait about 3 minutes to let the gifs load).
http://www.menstennisforums.com/showthread.php?t=650465
Those shots are VERY low percentage shots, and usually lead to a loss. Stan was just hot on the day.
robow7 said:I wonder if someone slipped him a piece of whole wheat bread when he wasn't looking
Fantastic to see The Gymnast so thoroughly exposed by a talented shot maker.
Tennis is alive once again.
sniper said:robow7 said:I wonder if someone slipped him a piece of whole wheat bread when he wasn't looking![]()
anyway, what's up with the high fist pumping.
Nadal started it I think, raising the fist really high after a winner.
(maybe Hewitt did it before him?)
Djoker, Murray and Stan the Man have all followed suit. (Thank god Federer has a normal, lower, more gentle fist)
I don't like the high fist, in fact I think it's awful.
but it seems to be the new style of expressing confidence.
Kind of like a pissing contest.
Please bring back the low fist.
sniper said:not in the Nadal league of ridiculousness, but still:
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and he's actually a nice guy.
but on court roids took possession of him.
The Hitch said:sniper said:not in the Nadal league of ridiculousness, but still:
![]()
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and he's actually a nice guy.
but on court roids took possession of him.
Hewitt is like Lemond and his generation in cycling in 1991. He was at the top when whatever new drugs tennis has came out in the mid 2000s. He was still 23 when he made the AO final. After that he didn't get worse, but just got blown away by all the new power players. Up until then there actually was something like a clay court specialist and grass court specialists. These days the participants making the quarters accross all gss are almost identical.
frenchfry said:At one point in the match they showed a statistic that William's shots are on average about 20kph faster than Safarova's.
Doping obviously existed before 2003-2005 but clearly went to a new level after. Since then there's been a total disappearence of players under 185. The disappearance of court specialists. The same players making every semi, every final. The game went from being say 50% physical to now about 80% physical. Guys like Hewitt at 180 can't compete. Ferrer kind of can with some players on clay. Maybe it's Spanish epo that allows him to grind out 5 setters but he still gets blown away by djoker, Murray or nadal 90% of the time.blackcat said:The Hitch said:sniper said:not in the Nadal league of ridiculousness, but still:
![]()
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and he's actually a nice guy.
but on court roids took possession of him.
Hewitt is like Lemond and his generation in cycling in 1991. He was at the top when whatever new drugs tennis has came out in the mid 2000s. He was still 23 when he made the AO final. After that he didn't get worse, but just got blown away by all the new power players. Up until then there actually was something like a clay court specialist and grass court specialists. These days the participants making the quarters accross all gss are almost identical.
I dont think this is correct Hitch. I think it started in Lendl's time, seriously, others might have had uppers, or amphetamines, but Lendl and MArtina brought it in with a structured regimen. I am assuming Chang had support from coach/badsportparent, and definitely Thomas Muster and Jim Courier, its impossible to go on clay tears during the european clay season, you cant win three titles them come to roland garros and win. Well, Courier was more hardcourt, but he had that game where you can wear down the competitor on the other side of the net.
heres a tell. Any number 1 who is proudly touted and lauded by the media who says "he is the fittest guy in the game and has a strenuous fitness regime" = doper fo' shur. so hewitt, rafter... them all.
and note on Hewitt, he hit the period of the game that was at a low ebb, he had Sampras retiring, he had Courier on verge of retirement even tho Jim was young, he obviously had hit the burnout wall. Agassi was off in Fresno doing binges of meth and writing scripts for breaking bad while he was banging brooke shields and more alliterations.,,
so Hewitt could capitalise. He beat nalbandian for atheist chrissakes and then, that was wimbledon, think he might have beaten Philippoussis at US Open, but that was Andy Roddick's year about 2002, and when he lost to Hewitt, Andy got a really dodgy call in the first or second set, and it threw him completely off his game, before that call, he had Hewitt and he was gonna win that game, think it was the quarters. Andy was about 19, coulda been 18, coulda been 20, Lleyton was bout 22. But that was Andy's US Open to win, but he let his head go in that loss in the quarters.
Hewitt hit the game at a really soft spot. Andy coulda racked up about 6 Majors, and divided the spoils of the first few years of the 2000 decade between him and Marat Safin.