STUTTGART, GERMANY - APRIL 20: Vera Zvonareva of Russia reacts during her second round match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova of Russia at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix at Porsche Arena on April 20, 2011 in Stuttgart, Germany. (Photo by Alex Grimm/Bongarts/Getty Images)
Bepa ditched Sergei for some guy named “Karen”. Google translate here. No words necessary.
Unlike certain others, and for what I hope are obvious reasons, I haven’t followed Vera’s association with Sergei very closely (not, in any case, with such fascination) – its results, as they pertained to Vera, were wholly satisfactory, and that was good enough for me.
It follows, then, that I know almost nothing about just how technical his input was. It must have been, at least in part – but the bottom line for me is, he seemed to make Vera happy (absolutely no innuendo intended) and from thence, the results seemed to flow.
I know even less about “Karen” – in fact, nothing at all. He may be far more technically astute than Sergei can ever hope to be. But if he doesn’t make Vera happy (again, no innuendo ) it will have all been for nothing.
You don’t need me to enumerate just how far Vera came with Sergei. And I’m still willing to concede the partnership simply ran its course the way Dinara’s did with Zeljko.
Coaching relationships, however, are as much, if not more, about how well its participants respond to one another – operational details play, at best, a modest, subsidiary role.
I’m almost sorry I never got on this train, because unlike so much of what passes for eye-candy nowadays, I totally understand. And now its over.
Julia Goerges beat Caroline Wozniacki, the current world No. 1, to take the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, the first premier title of her young career. The score was 7-6(3), 6-3.
Two shocking things happened in this match. The first set went by without a break of serve and the world No. 1 never broke her opponent's serve for the entire match. That's right. Julia won the final without dropping her serve, saving all five break points. On clay.
For much of the match, the commentators compared the hard-hitting, No. 32-ranked German to former Roland Garros champion Mary Pierce. But everytime Julia would run around a backhand to take a forehand inside in and down the line, I was reminded of Steffi Graf. The young woman was simply fearless on all the big points and the younger woman who's made a career out of pushing forehands and running all day until her opponents run out of patience simply ran out of luck. Wozniacki had no answer for the barrage of forehands Goerges fired her way. 38 winners in all to just 9 for the computer's No. 1.
"I had goosebumps at match point. It was an unbelievable feeling playing the final with so many people watching," Goerges told the press in Stuttgart after the match. "Everything was going so well but you can never be sure against Caroline. She has turned lots of matches around when nobody expected her to. She is only beaten when the last point is over. Now I'm looking forward to my niece's baptism on Monday and being able to sleep in my own bed again after three months traveling the tour!"
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Getty
Elsewhere, Rafael Nadal won another title over David Ferrer. I feel asleep after the first set.
It's busy at Annabessacook Farm and I haven't been able to watch much tennis. But I managed to turn on the Tennis Channel after serving breakfast today to see a full house applauding enthusiastically during a WTA match. Julia Goerges was playing Samantha Stosur in Stuttgart. The German upset the Australian. The German fans were all in. Homegirl delivered. It was electric.
The surprise finalist will face Caroline Wozniacki tomorrow. I'm going to watch, even if I can't find the time. There's nothing like a big crowd watching one of its own play for a title.
7 consecutive MC titles. Takeout: Rafa wins on clay even when he sucks. But you already knew that.
Except it shouldn’t have been that way – not this year.
Whilst its always good to see Rafa “come home” and begin winning again on a surface as organic to him as sunlight is to photosynthesis, I started off the week guessing that he’ll be upset at least once this clay court season. Nothing I saw in MC changed my mind.
Without wishing to get too specific he hasn’t “looked right” since the year began – those who’ve observed him closely (or who’ve heard/read me bleating endlessly about it) know exactly what I mean.
The only reason I keep bringing it up is because it doesn’t seem like its down to any specific technical failing and/or injury. Which, in my mind, makes it worse.
Some of his shot (mis)selection has been straight out of a comic book. The UFEs, meanwhile, have had all of the uncertainty and spontaneity of quantum fluctuations.
We saw it in both the IW/Miami finals, we saw it in the Miami QF vs Berd, we saw it against Murray in the SFs, and we saw it again in the final.
Does it surprise me that Rafa, being Rafa, found a way through on clay – something not possible, just last month, on a hard court vs. Nole? Not in the slightest. But let us please not pretend Daveed didn’t entirely blow his chances (of which there were many).
To put it bluntly, this is about as ineffectual as Rafa gets on a clay court. A better player (like say Nole or Fed) would almost certainly have called him on it. A “lesser”but nevertheless solid player like Daveed might be expected to too, but should, in any case, have forced a third set.
And yet, the vast body of reflection and analysis following the final will inevitably be of the “night follows day”, “sun rises in the east”, “Rafa wins on clay” variety.
I’m afraid I simply don’t see it that way. Not quite.
Foolish to argue against a 230-16 [93%] win/loss record on clay forged mostly without resistance over 7 years – as we saw, even playing as badly as he was, Rafa can be relied on to find options on clay which simply don’t appear to exist anywhere else.
All the same, things don’t appear to me to be as certain this year as they plainly have been in years gone by. And I don’t think I’m alone.
***
One last word on Murray. Well two actually:
1) The SF wasn’t simply the best performance I’ve seen from Murray since before his slump began (things could hardly have gotten any worse). It might even have been the best I’ve seen him play on clay.
Why is this SUCH a big deal?
A Masters-1000 semi final on his “worst” surface (more on that later) and his first ever set off Rafa on clay, all after his poorest spell of tennis since he entered the top ten.
Only, you wouldn’t know just how well Murray played if you read the match reports, all of which were at pains to point out (correctly) that Rafa played like horsesh*t, particularly in the 2nd set. He did, no point in disputing that – its what I’ve been saying all season. But not crediting Murray would be like claiming Rafa only won the last set because Murrays elbow began to play up as the cortizone injection wore off.
Strange how some are only willing to recognise Rafa’s poor play when it’s consistent with their attempts to undercut Murray. Else its all “Night follows Day”, “The Sun rises in the East”, “Rafa wins on clay”…
2) I’ve never really understood why clay should be Murrays “worst” surface.
I get why he might prefer hard or even grass, but “worst” seems to carry an additional level of stigma that I don’t feel is warranted for a player as skilled as Murray.
Fed and Nole have the results they do on clay not because of any particular adeptness on the surface – but because of their adeptness at TENNIS.
The same can almost be said to apply to Murray. By the same token, if he loses on clay, it will be for all the same reasons he sometimes loses on hard courts. Namely passivity and a questionable temperament. Yep, those two cretins again. Feel free to rip on him for that (I know I do), but lets stop pretending clay is his “worst” surface.
Even if it were possible to get past all the scheduling complaints (all of which exist for DC btw), the fact that only the final (if that) ever seems to get broadcast, renders even the most tenuous connection (the type I currently have with DC) almost impossible.
The only reason I bring it up now is because of the fireworks that erupted in the immediate aftermath of Domis “win” over Ana in the Slovak-Serbian Fed-Cup tie this weekend, where Ana was forced to retire (in tears) with what seems to be a torn ab, all after being 6-3, 3-0 up; following which Domi pranced around and celebrated, as most are putting it, “like she’d just won a Slam”.
Domi, thereafter, suffered an undiluted-haterade, twitter backlash, and the rest, as they say, is history.
I’m calling bullsh*t. And not at all because I like Domi (you already know I do, and I’d be well within my rights to do precisely that given how “popularity” seems to allow you to get away with pretty much anything nowadays).
I’m calling bullsh*t because I think the reaction is not simply disproportionate – it’s grotesque.
I’m calling bullsh*t because far too many, otherwise sensible people, are willing to look the other way when other, more popular players engage in conduct that is far worse .
I’m calling bullsh*t because far too many people are willing to overlook similar utterly distasteful episodes from Serbia, who continue to enjoy an overwhelmingly positive tennis image amongst both fans and media alike – nothing wrong with that, I just don’t believe in giving anyone a free pass (I only quote them at all because they’re directly involved in this incident).
First things first. I didn’t see the incident, and if Domi has behaved even half as badly as is being implied, then it deserves to be called out in the same way as it would if JJ or Ana or Woz or Kim or Novak or Rafa or Fed or anyone else did.
What I will say is, irrespective of how much censure Domi actually deserves, I guarantee that the utterly demented HYPERBOLE (and it is demented – perform a twitter search on @cibulkova to get an idea of the abuse) will go on for far longer than it has any right to. Ana’s worldwide (and ultra-nationalist local) fanbase will settle for nothing less. It’s the law of Fanboy Freakonomics. And of the jungle.
Never mind, for the moment, that I’ve personally seen Ana fist-pumping UFEs off the racquet of an injured opponent.
Never mind that we be wouldn’t be seeing even a fraction of this HYSTERIA if it were, say, Kvitova, rather than Ana, the object of Domi’s miscue.
Why even go to hypotheticals? Where was this HYSTERIA when Petko boogie-woogied right after demolishing a hobbling Jelena Dokic earlier this year in Brisbane for the loss of only one game? Was that not equally tasteless, however innocuous the dance’s motives? Uh-uh – not in the Fanboy (and Fangirl)-Freakonomy.
The truth, is neither Petra nor Dokic (for all the sympathy she’s earnt for her troubles over the years) can hope to compete with the overwhelming enormity of Ana and Petko’s worldwide following.
Now is probably a good time to point out that I don’t begrudge either of them that following. On a good day I might even be persuaded it’s #GoodForTennis.
Now is probably also a good time to point out that I find some of the hormonal, bellicose (and in Ana’s case nationalistic) hyperbole that accompanies it to be utterly repellent. And, needless to say, pretty #ToxicForTennis.
Again, I didn’t see the match, and I very much doubt this will go down as Domi’s finest moment. What is also perfectly plausible is that a young, enthusiastic (and not particularly celebrated or decorated) woman simply got caught up in the utter frenzy of playing (and winning) for her country – but, of course, for reasons which I’d like to pretend I don’t understand, she doesn’t get a free pass.
Uh-uh. Too late for all that deary. Don’t think they’re interested in any case. Right about now, I’d say you’re five places above Marion Bartoli and only a couple of places below Justine Henin who heads up the Freakonomy’s “Most-Wanted” list.
Am I suggesting that Rafael Nadal is lucky for winning his historic seventh consecutive title in the French Riviera today? Given the way David Ferrer tossed away an opportunity to at least push the match to a third set, then sure, why not.
Mostly, though, Nadal is lucky to be winning anything at all without being able to rely on his serve. All year, it's been a problem. Only once, when facing triple break point early in the third against Tomas Berdych in Miami, did his serve save ultimately save the day. But in the finals of the three consecutive Masters 1000 events he's contested in 2011, his serve has been woeful. Novak Djokovic got the best of him in the first two, though it took three sets both times, on a surface where having a woeful serve can keep you from winning.
But on this day, on this surface, against this player, Nadal showed once again why clay is his very best friend. Even with a faltering serve and his tentative approach to the match -- there was a Shot Spot graphic that showed him striking his shots from behind the baseline 90% of the time -- he knows the nuances of the clay better than any other, can exploit all the angles with nary a thought. At once impressive and boring. This is nothing new. I wrote about it years ago already.
While it's good to see the world No. 1 finally get a victory under his belt -- he hasn't won a title since Tokyo last October -- I was hoping for a new champion here this year. I remain hopeful that the Red Brick Wall won't run the table on clay this season.
Rafael Nadal of Spain (bottom) and his compatriot David Ferrer play in the final of the Monte-Carlo Masters tennis tournament at the Monte-Carlo Country Club in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France, April 17, 2011.
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Overslept, no coffee yet. Need oatmeal. Kitchen's a mess. The men can't hold serve today. Talk it out. I'm back and forth.
Spain's Rafael Nadal hits a return to his opponent Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia during the Monte-Carlo ATP Masters Series Tournament tennis match, on April 15, 2011 in Monaco.
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Are we getting ready for an all-Spanish final?
I think not. Some of you know I'm a terrible predictor of such things, but I'm stepping way out of school and telling you that not only won't there be an all-Spanish final at the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters this year, but there won't be a Spaniard in the final at all.
Now I'm going to run and duck for cover. I need coffee.
"I will try my best. The last two matches I have won against him," he said. "In Paris last year I killed him on clay and hopefully that result is still in the back of his mind.
"After beating Roger Federer there is nothing I can't do."
-- Jurgen Melzer on David Ferrer, whom he plays in the semis
Three writers brought to my attention the following exchanges that appear in two recent Jon Wertheim Mailbags.
There has been much debate on Twitter among tennis journalists whether or not bloggers should be credentialed for tournaments. I use the term blogger generally because there are some tennis journalists who do write blogs. Also there are some journalists who use information from blogs to write their stories. Where do you stand on this issue? (I don't know whether you should use my real name or not as I might get stoned by both journalists and bloggers.) -Anonymous, New York/New Jersey
• I don't envy the credentialing gatekeepers on this issue. Tennis in particular -- as we'd expect from a scattered, global sport -- has a huge online presence and following. Excluding bloggers and even full-time tweeters would be a fool's errand. Yet if everyone with a blog were granted a credential, media rooms would need to be the size of the Palace of Versailles. A blanket policy won't work. You simply need to assess on a case-by-case basis. The saving grace: it's pretty easy to discern which bloggers are legit and have a critical mass of followers -- and which don't. Source
Continuing last week's discussion, where do you stand on bloggers? Are you, too, in the "fans with typewriters" camp? - John P., New York
Since Key Biscayne, I've gotten bits and pieces about a "Twitter battle" and an "alias feud" and a lot of other weird allegations of subterfuge that I don't entirely understand. I'm not sure I ever got the blogger-journalist dichotomy. There are some bloggers who are knowledgeable and diligent and creative and belong in a press room. There are some bloggers who probably don't warrant credentials. As far as I'm concerned, bloggers are a welcome addition to the media caravan. As the mainstream media dwindles, as budgets are cut, as tennis loses currency in the U.S. and goes ever more global, bloggers serve an increasingly important role. If I'm following from afar, give me a passionate tennis lover who might write clunkily or express her fandom too blatantly over the hockey writer for the local newspaper who's covering the tennis against his will. Source
Jon's a cool cat with a fair and open mind. He's also right.
Reuters Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia returns the ball to Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic during the Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in Monaco April 14, 2011.
::
Baldy andDavid Ferrer have already advanced in straight sets. Right now, Rafael Nadal is having his way with Richard Gasquet.
I'm not yet ready to be on European time.
ORDER OF PLAY - THURSDAY, 14 APRIL, 2011
COURT CENTRAL start 10:30 am
M Raonic (CAN) vs [4] D Ferrer (ESP)
Not Before 11:30 AM [1] R Nadal (ESP) vs [13] R Gasquet (FRA)
Not Before 1:30 PM [15] M Cilic (CRO) vs [2] R Federer (SUI) [3] [WC] A Murray (GBR) vs [16] G Simon (FRA) L Dlouhy (CZE) / J Tipsarevic (SRB) or G Monfils (FRA) / J Tsonga (FRA) vs [5] M Fyrstenberg (POL) / M Matkowski (POL) - Time and Court To Be Arranged
COURT DES PRINCES start 10:30 am
I Ljubicic (CRO) vs [5] [WC] T Berdych (CZE) T Robredo (ESP) vs [11] V Troicki (SRB) [Q] F Gil (POR) vs [8] G Monfils (FRA) [7] J Melzer (AUT) vs [9] N Almagro (ESP)
COURT 2 start 12:00 noon
[6] R Bopanna (IND) / A Qureshi (PAK) vs E Butorac (USA) / J Rojer (AHO)
Not Before 2:00 PM [1] B Bryan (USA) / M Bryan (USA) or E Gulbis (LAT) / V Troicki (SRB) vs M Granollers (ESP) / T Robredo (ESP) - After Suitable Rest
COURT 9 start 12:00 noon
J Chela (ARG) / B Soares (BRA) vs S Stakhovsky (UKR) / M Youzhny (RUS)
Results - Wednesday, 13 April, 2011
Singles - Second Round [1] R Nadal (ESP) d J Nieminen (FIN) 62 62 [3] [WC] A Murray (GBR) d [WC] R Stepanek (CZE) 61 64 [4] D Ferrer (ESP) d F Lopez (ESP) 62 60 T Robredo (ESP) d [6] F Verdasco (ESP) 64 63 [7] J Melzer (AUT) d R Haase (NED) 36 61 62 [8] G Monfils (FRA) d D Gimeno-Traver (ESP) 75 62 [9] N Almagro (ESP) d [Q] M Gonzalez (ARG) 67(6) 75 76(10) - saved 4 M.P. [11] V Troicki (SRB) d F Fognini (ITA) 63 46 64 [13] R Gasquet (FRA) d G Garcia-Lopez (ESP) 62 61 [15] M Cilic (CRO) d [Q] P Riba (ESP) 52 ret. (right knee) [16] G Simon (FRA) d A Montanes (ESP) 63 64 [Q] F Gil (POR) d F Mayer (GER) 75 61
Doubles - Second Round [1] B Bryan (USA) / M Bryan (USA) d E Gulbis (LAT) / V Troicki (SRB) 63 61 [2] M Mirnyi (BLR) / D Nestor (CAN) d R Gasquet (FRA) / I Ljubicic (CRO) 62 75 [4] L Kubot (POL) / O Marach (AUT) d [WC] J Benneteau (FRA) / J Chardy (FRA) 76(5) 46 12-10 J Chela (ARG) / B Soares (BRA) d [8] R Lindstedt (SWE) / H Tecau (ROU) 62 64
Doubles - First Round G Monfils (FRA) / J Tsonga (FRA) d L Dlouhy (CZE) / J Tipsarevic (SRB) 64 75 E Butorac (USA) / J Rojer (AHO) d G Garcia-Lopez (ESP) / A Montanes (ESP) 46 64 10-8
Roger Federer of Switzerland plays a backhand in his match against Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany during Day Three of the ATP Masters Series Tennis at the Monte Carlo Country Club on April 12, 2011 in Monte Carlo, Monaco.
::
ORDER OF PLAY - WEDNESDAY, 13 APRIL, 2011 REVISED COURT CENTRAL start 10:30 am
G Garcia-Lopez (ESP) vs [13] R Gasquet (FRA)
Not Before 11:30AM D Gimeno-Traver (ESP) vs [8] G Monfils (FRA)
Not Before 1:30 PM [1] R Nadal (ESP) vs J Nieminen (FIN) [3] [WC] A Murray (GBR) vs [WC] R Stepanek (CZE) L Dlouhy (CZE) / J Tipsarevic (SRB) vs G Monfils (FRA) / J Tsonga (FRA)
COURT DES PRINCES start 10:30 am
F Lopez (ESP) vs [4] D Ferrer (ESP)
Not Before 11:30 AM A Montanes (ESP) vs [16] G Simon (FRA) [6] F Verdasco (ESP) vs T Robredo (ESP) [7] J Melzer (AUT) vs R Haase (NED)
COURT 2 start 11:00am
F Fognini (ITA) vs [11] V Troicki (SRB)
Not Before 12:30 PM [15] M Cilic (CRO) vs [Q] P Riba (ESP) or P Starace (ITA) - Possible Court Change R Gasquet (FRA) / I Ljubicic (CRO) vs [2] M Mirnyi (BLR) / D Nestor (CAN) [1] B Bryan (USA) / M Bryan (USA) vs E Gulbis (LAT) / V Troicki (SRB)
COURT 9 start 11:00am
F Mayer (GER) vs [Q] F Gil (POR)
Not Before 12:30 PM [Q] M Gonzalez (ARG) vs [9] N Almagro (ESP) - Possible Court Change [4] L Kubot (POL) / O Marach (AUT) vs [WC] J Benneteau (FRA) / J Chardy (FRA)
COURT 11 start 1:00 pm
[8] R Lindstedt (SWE) / H Tecau (ROU) vs J Chela (ARG) / B Soares (BRA)
Not Before 3:00 PM E Butorac (USA) / J Rojer (AHO) vs G Garcia-Lopez (ESP) / A Montanes (ESP)
::
RESULTS - TUESDAY, 13 APRIL, 2011
Singles - Second Round [2] R Federer (SUI) d P Kohlschreiber (GER) 62 61 [5] [WC] T Berdych (CZE) d [Q] O Rochus (BEL) 62 63 I Ljubicic (CRO) d [12] J Tsonga (FRA) 76(2) 64 M Raonic (CAN) d E Gulbis (LAT) 64 75
Singles - First Round [16] G Simon (FRA) d T Bellucci (BRA) 63 62 G Garcia-Lopez (ESP) d [Q] V Millot (FRA) 62 64 A Montanes (ESP) d X Malisse (BEL) 64 62 F Fognini (ITA) d K Anderson (RSA) 36 62 62 F Lopez (ESP) d J Tipsarevic (SRB) 46 63 76(4) [Q] M Gonzalez (ARG) d V Hanescu (ROU) 36 75 61 [Q] P Riba (ESP) d P Starace (ITA) 46 63 63
Doubles - Second Round S Stakhovsky (UKR) / M Youzhny (RUS) d [3] J Melzer (AUT) / P Petzschner (GER) 61 76(6) M Granollers (ESP) / T Robredo (ESP) d [7] M Llodra (FRA) / N Zimonjic (SRB) 62 61
Doubles - First Round [WC] J Benneteau (FRA) / J Chardy (FRA) d M Lopez (ESP) / J Monaco (ARG) 63 67(1) 12-10 J Chela (ARG) / B Soares (BRA) d M Mertinak (SVK) / D Norman (BEL) 62 36 10-7
It never dawned on me that on my first experience as credentialed media to cover the first week of the Sony Ericsson Open, an event I've wanted to cover almost more than any other, I would be part of a reporting team that broke a substantial story in the English-language tennis press.
We were just doing what Karen, the editor of Tennis Panorama News, told us to do. "Bring fans along on your journey. And remember none of the first week in Miami will be televised, so you'll have a big audience if you can keep them entertained."
Color me surprised, then, that the media center was virtually empty for most of the first week. I had imagined it a bustling place, packed with writers trying to tell a set of stories with words and pictures to a global fan base annoyed by the lack of television coverage.
What an opportunity to grab some fans and hold them. Not knowing exactly how, I worked the event as if I did, fueled by curiosity and instinct. So, during the March 22 WTA All-Access hour with 8 of the Top 10, I left a micro-recorder in front of one player, videotaped an interview with another player, all the while JD, my other half, photographed everybody and listened to whatever caught his fancy. No surprise that he was all over Kim Clijsters. He's always had a soft spot for her. When Kim finished her roundtable in English, three members of the Belgian media sat down for an intimate session. My other half, who's originally from the Netherlands, sat down as well. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw this and figured Kim might get a different set of questions in Flemish so why not tape the interview. She might also be more candid speaking in her mother tongue. With so much laughter coming from all around the table, I'd want to know exactly what was so funny. I understand Dutch a bit, Flemish a bit less, but I got a feeling Kim was telling some story about radiation and Indian Wells. After JD, who's also a physical therapist, asked her the final question about her shoulder, I moved on to Victoria Azarenka, a player whose temperament I've criticized openly, who, ironically, seemed so calm that morning, I sensed she might re-ignite some good tennis and go deep in the draw. She had won here before.
(Random: Kim likes sushi most; Vika, salmon, any which way. Miss Vera is all about Thai cuisine, Francesca can't get enough pasta, and Caroline is down with chicken. Sam and Jelena agree with Kim.)
Later, when we were courtside on the Grandstand watching a rather erratic and uninspired Sorana Cirstea blowing big leads against Zheng Jie, as I was trying out the new Twitter application we downloaded for JD's mobile device, he whispered into my ear, "Oh. I forgot to tell you. I have some news. Kim said in Flemish that she wasn't going to play any tournaments in Asia this year because of radiation fears."
I didn't sit through Kim's entire interview in English. I whispered back, "Surely she said the same thing in English, right?"
"Nope. She talked about Japan and was worried for players from the country, but she didn't talk about her panic at all. Her interview was mostly about her shoulder and her game and what it's like to not have the Williams sisters around an event they've dominated -- and, oh, yeah, she said Serena is the best player ever -- and what it's like to be a mother and all that kinda stuff."
Wow. Eager, naive me, fueled by curiosity and instinct, just thought I'd tweet that little scoop on GVTennisNews, the Twitter account for Tennis Panorama News. It was, after all, the outlet that applied for our credentials.
Minutes later, Karen calls to tell me that Matt Cronin tweeted her for a direct quote. I told her it was in Flemish, but if necessary we could transcribe it later. "Soon as you can," she said firmly. I got the sense from her tone, from Cronin's direct quote request, that this was more meat than morsel. "Just tweet her quote in English."
Thank goodness I'd put my digital recorder down in front of Kim. I knew JD wouldn't make up something like that, but without a direct quote, my morsel turned meat would remain hearsay. We left the Cirstea match after the first set, grabbed some lunch -- he, a burger, Thai shrimp crepe for me -- and headed back to the media center to get working on a translation and transcription. I do as told and post the following tweets:
Now, you would think that as fast as this meat cooked, outside of the re-tweets, which by their nature include a source, outlets who ran the story would at least attribute us. Because, well, that's what's supposed to happen, right?
Karen, who scours tennis sites meticulously, noticed that our meat was served up all over the place without attribution, even on tennis.com's ticker, which, at the time, read as follows:
World No. 2 Kim Clijsters tellspressin Miami that her fear of getting radiation poisoning as a result of leaks in a couple of Japan's nuclear reactors will keep her from playing any tournaments in Asia this fall. "I won't go [to Japan], Clijsters said. "And I won't go to Beijing either."
Chris Chase over at Busted Racquet went above and beyond to link and include the context of the entire quote back to this blog. Super nice of him, wouldn't you say? He'd probably just say he was doing what was necessary.
In all, if memory serves, his was the only outlets that included a link to the extended post, Who knew that common sense ethics had evaporated from tennis journalism? I sure didn't. JD was most perplexed. "I did all that work to make sure...Karen said...I could be taking photos....who is it that needs the quote?.... Who? .... Are they even, like, here?.... He needed a direct quote and then doesn't even acknowledge us? What the....?"
JD's not one to get perturbed by such things. Not that he's ever been involved in such a thing before, mind you, but generally speaking, he's more forgiving than most.
We moved on. "Please be sure to get photos and videos of Federer's practice session," I said to him.
"But you don't care much for him."
"We're covering an event, not a set of players. I'm sure Fed's got a lot of fans who'd like to see him practicing."
The tennis.com ticker was sort of fixed a week or so later (sort of because the copy still doesn't provide an actual link to the tweets or the longer post), too late for anyone except someone looking for it to actually notice. Perhaps it was merely an oversight just to get the story out as quickly as possible. I didn't get a response from Cronin before I published this post, but when I do, I'll post an update. Till then, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt. Surely, he's a man of integrity who would know that journalism ethics require that he attribute his sources. Even a gossip monger provides provenance. It must have been an oversight. Journalists have been fired for stuff like this.
Whatever the case, here's what I know: tennis.com tickered a story from a lesser-known tennis site who used an even lesser-known tennis blogger to transmit a meaty little scoop. Search "Clijsters won't play Japan" and see that tennis.com is the go-to link provided in almost every story. If you didn't know any better, you'd think tennis.com had someone at the roundtable who could understand Flemish and translate it into English. In no time flat, the Clijsters story was all the buzz, popping up on forums and wires and blogs and feeds all over the globe.
The next day, the WTA released a statement from Kim:
"Most importantly, my thoughts and sympathies are with the people in Japan. It's heart-wrenching to see what they're going through right now. Of course the health and safety of anyone traveling to a potentially impacted area is my top priority as well as the WTA's, and I know that the WTA will continue to monitor the situation."
With that statement, Clijsters officially withdrew from the Pan Pacific Open.
A meaty little scoop for which tennis.com took all the credit. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Roger Federer, Andy Roddick and others were asked about their intentions of playing in Asia. They all diplomatically said they hadn't thought about it or would assess the situation when all the facts came in.
When Neil Harman, who, despite what's coming down the page, remains one of my favorite tennis writers, showed up in the media center and sat right across from my station, I introduced myself and let him know I felt he was one of the more creative writers in the industry and that I usually enjoyed his articles. He was accessible and nice and engaging. We spoke briefly about Clijsters. "We still need to get it verified, since no one in the English press heard the story, but I've heard about the news of Clijsters not playing Japan."
Well, not quite "no one." Credentialed media, no matter who or where from, are members of the press. I speak English. I told him we broke the story, and if he could understand Flemish, he could listen to the recorder that sat right on my work station a few feet away and get all the verification we needed.
The next day the story appeared in the Belgian press.
"She didn't say that," JD said upon reading one of write ups.
"What do you mean?"
"She never said she put any of those iodine foods in Jada's yogurt. I think they made that part up."
Say it isn't so. Journalists don't make up quotes, do they?
According to Sloane Stephens, sometimes they do. Right before the transcribed part of our one-on-one interview began in the main interview room -- which was right after she qualified for the main draw and found herself in an empty room with one interested writer (never mind that later in the evening, a few journalists were speculating in the media center about whether or not she was the highest-ranked African American on the WTA and I thought, Why weren't you there to ask her? -- the WTA representative who escorted her to our interview said that another journalist had also requested her. "Who was that?" Stephens asked. The rep told her about the man from a Florida paper, to which she replied, "Oh, him. He completely misquoted something I said the last time he wrote about me."
JD Blom
(Random: I was the only writer who showed up forMaria Sharapova's first interview as well. I mentioned that here. (Read the comments to this post. Notice the exchange I have with Arthurlevine2, a commenter who showed up for the first time on my blog here. We'll come back to Arthur a bit further down the page.) I was one of only two English-language writers who showed up at Juan Martin del Potro's news conference after his first-round victory. The two of us didn't take up much of his time for he looked exhausted. When we finished, members of Spanish-language media swarmed around him like bees. Why couldn't they give him some space and ask question from their seats? It was quite a sight.)
JD Blom
::
"Does anybody do any work around here," JD said to me on our third day in the media center. By then, more writers had arrived, but with the exception of a handful, many just hung around the media center talking with each other about top ATP players in not so complimentary ways and discussing several story lines with WTA and ATP media relations staff who are set up in the center to field interview requests, among other things. As far as JD was concerned, there was too much gossiping and not enough working. "It's beautiful outside. You'd think they'd want to get to the courts and take in some actual tennis."
"Maybe they are. It's not like we're sitting here monitoring them all day."
"True. But I haven't seen many of them anywhere but in here."
Back from a match on an outer court, I found a one-page biography of Milos Raonic on our workstation. Neither one of us had requested any information on the young man, but there it was anyway. Safe to say, Milos, who reminds many pundits of Pete Sampras, is being promoted as the next big thing. When he lost his first-round match against Somdev Devarrman a few days later, there was nary a peep from anyone about the talented Canadian with the big serve. A bit more on him later.
::
A professional tournament, especially the $4.5 million Sony Ericsson Open, is a gargantuan production with too many things that can go awry. It's easy to take it all for granted. The staff works hard, is well-organized, and makes the players, volunteers, media, but most of all the fans, feel right at home. If I could hand out awards, I'd give them to the entire media center cafeteria staff. Whenever I walked through those doors, they made me feel like I was the most important person there. The food was good, too. You could get mango smoothies and sushi maki in grab-and-go containers feast on a buffet featuring two proteins with several delicisous sides, as well as a vegetarian pasta and salad bar, for eating in. No surprise, then, that the official event credo reads as follows:
I was impressed to find out on the initial tour of the grounds that the facilities manager, the person responsible for constructing the entire facility was a woman.
Speaking of which, where are all the women photographers? Sure, there were some. I sat next to a great freelance photographer at Novak Djokovic's Friends for Japan Benefit dinner. Too bad I didn't think to ask her where she thought all the women behind cameras were, but it seemed that most of the photographers courtside, on the red carpet at the charity events and players party, behind the video and film cameras were men.
Just saying.
::
Shortly after returning home to Maine, I was surprised to read about a Twitter "battle" between established writers who call themselves journalists and bloggers who call themselves bloggers. Even more surprised by those waging the battle. Apparently, there were too many fan bloggers in the media center and a few journalists took issue. C Note, over at Forty Deuce, recounted the entire melodrama quite well in her post Please. Don't Let the Facts Get In The Way of Your Journalisming.
Spend a little time with this write up. And get knee-deep in the comments. Please. You will find a thou-doth-protest-too-much journalist (Arthurlevine2 from above, exposbabe and TennisFanUSA elsewhere and one can only guess what other identities this Internet Sybil uses) who seems to suggest in her own comments that she's not the sharpest knife in the drawer, who takes for fools intelligent people with access to IP addresses. If she's so secure in her profession, why does she find the need to troll bloggers and mislead and protest so much? You will also find this:
I wonder if the motivation for 'real journalists' to speak out about this is because they are feeling threatened? As a tennis fan and one mainly of the WTA there was a real paucity of coverage for me to tap in to. So imagine how excited I was to find this site where not only could I read about my favs but I could also interact. It filled a gap in what was being provided for me, an ordinary yet enthusiastic fan who was thirsty for more than just match reports that focused on the ATP.
Tennis is a fun diversion for me and the majority of bloggers respond to the 'fun' side of the sport. I believe there is a place for the business of the sport, reporting matches and speculating on who is doing what to try and improve. But that's not why I follow tennis to be honest. I started watching tennis as a child and was fasinated with how the women moved, what they wore along with what they could achieve and I still like that. And being able to share my disappointment when my fav goes down (I'm looking at you JJ!), to share the happiness when they finally do what you think they should (I'm still waiting on that one) or to just laugh out loud at their silliness is what brings tennis to life for me.
And laugh out loud is what I do frequently and often when I visit this site and what brings me back pretty much daily. And I sincerely hope that tournament directors continue to grant all access passes to bloggers such as yourself - they, like me, realise that you provide a service that journalists don't at present. You make it fun and for that as a fan I thank you.
I was already back in Maine tweeting updates on a televised match when the Battle of Twitterville began. Writers quickly took sides. Journalists rallied around journalists, bloggers rallied around bloggers, with the occasional blogger kissing up to the journalists in an effort to, oh, I don't know, boost their credibility perhaps. Reminded me of high school. I tweeted that I'd chime in the matter when the event was over.
Here we are.
From where I sit, all writers given credentials to professional tennis tournaments are legitimate. This common-sense concept was shared way before the latest installment in the battle between journalists and bloggers by two journalists who write for an established print and online media outlet. A big one. Thankfully, not all journalists feel the need to underscore divisions in the cavalry of writers writing about tennis these days.
Others seem almost proud to do so. "Fans with typewriters," as Harman calls bloggers in his Twitter tirade, is an interesting construction for a few reasons. First, anyone who writes about tennis, whether they've been doing it for 40 years or 4 months, is a fan. Who on earth would cover a sport of which they weren't a fan? Second, who uses a typewriter anymore? To be fair, Harman did tweet this was something they "used to" call the lowly fan who likely spent a ton of money to cover an event merely to "gawk" at players. Because Facebook and Twitter are the "necessary evils", as one freelancer put it, that we must accept in this ever-connected social networking universe, I would imagine that old-school media is finding it needs to adapt to new "indie media" outlets, as some bloggers are wont to call them, or lose readers and subscribers and a base of fans eager to buy what it's selling.
What passes for tennis journalism has been under incessant critique by tennis fans for at least as long as this blog has existed at the end of 2006. Fans have become annoyed with sloppy reporting (some fan forums have entire threads dedicated to bad tennis journalism) and all the hype -- the propaganda -- that the sport promotes through its tools in Big Media. Not all journalists are tools, mind you, but when Jon Wertheim of Sports Illustrated (no, I wouldn't consider him a tool) uses an investment metaphor to explain what to do about Federerand Djokovic, the mindset driving many of the stories carried by the mainstream outlets remains clear as silver striking crystal.
Before I arrived in Miami, I'd taken note of Raonic. He's already made Canadian tennis history by winning his first ATP title in San Jose earlier this year. I knew he was articulate and thoughtful and intelligent with a great sense of perspective about his tennis and the game, and has been working to keep his terrible temper under control. Quite frankly, he doesn't need any more hype. Didn't need to have his one-page bio spread around the media center like a press release. Or a mutual fund prospectus. I rolled my eyes when I saw it on our work station. I like him just fine but why waste the paper and the toner to tell me he exists? And as I said, when he lost to an Indian player few journalists are writing anything about at all, all I heard was crickets. When he actually wins something of import, he'll deserve more attention. Till then, it's probably best to let him be exactly who he is: a young player with a big game and a lot of promise.
::
The biggest faux pas we made -- yeah, there was bound to be a significant muff up in a tennis reporter's Miami debut -- was posting video footage online of entire player interviews from the first week. Why was this a problem, especially since seeing and hearing a player versus simply reading a transcript of his or her words can bring an entirely different picture to an interview? Because the rules as stated in the media regulations said so. Basically, you can only upload up to 90 seconds per day any on-site, non-competition video or film from practice sessions or interviews. The exception to the rule? You must provide running editorial over the footage. Then, I suppose, although it's not clearly stated, you can publish as much as you like. So, if I tell you what to think and feel about a a player's interview, fine, you can see and hear the whole thing, but if I allow the player to speak for himself (show, don't tell) you can only get snippets? I actually thought the advisory said 90 minutes, which made more sense. You could easily post 90 minutes of several players' practice sessions and a few on-the-record interviews for fans to watch of their favorite players each day without ever compromising the image of a player or cutting into whatever profits the sponsors intend to make by waiting till the first weekend to sell the rights for anybody to televise anything at all. But that's not the way it is. So when the tournament's media director finally got around to asking me, the day before we departed -- he really did have bigger fish to fry -- to edit down to 90 seconds my published footage of Roddick and Djokovic and Federer interviews, I simply pulled them down. There was no single 90-second segment of any of their interviews that would stand alone. And I edit video about as well as I play tennis. Why produce a commercial-length snippet when fans might get more out of seeing the whole thing?
"We've got to keep our sponsors happy," said the media director.
This seems to be the crux of it. Corporatism summed up succinctly. How random or related was the Twitter battle waged by journalists to the largely unattributed scoop this lowly fan blogger stumbled upon on his debut in Miami? Is it at all possible Big Media outlets would be reluctant to show their readers they were sourcing news from "fans with typewriters"? Would their readers even care?
Maybe. As one fan tweeted, "I prefer to read a blogger to a journo. Real talk."
::
Tennis fans are savvy. And relentless. We'll go all over the Internet to find a live stream for a match some network will later air on tape delay, even if it risks Trojan viruses and other high-tech nuisances. We want to see tennis as it happens, for heaven's sake, we want to see tennis players off the court, we want to get a feel for the behind the scenes in ways that are accessible and creative.
Why aren't official event websites providing live-streaming to player-party red-carpets? I can't imagine it would be all that hard to set up. And if not that, why not put a photographer with some mobile device on the carpet to tweet photos of players as they arrive? We did it. ("Don't even bother trying to tweet descriptions. Just take a photo and tweet that," ordered the other half. Simple. Brilliant.) And what we did kept one respected journalist at one mainstream paper at his desk for another few hours before going home. He just wanted to "be there" for the "live action."
Yes. Make no mistake. All tennis writers are "fans with typewriters." For real, though. Journalists need to stop tripping.
As a friend of mine in Boston confided, "I've always loved tennis. But I follow it more now because your passion for tennis comes through so clearly on your blog. And quite frankly, I don't find that in a lot of other places."
I don't earn a living from writing about tennis. I'm an organic farmer. Small business owner. Author. Chef. So when I take the time away from my livelihood to sit down and write about something for which I'm not getting paid, you better believe I'm going to make it worth my while.
And yours.
None of us are going anywhere. Not the journalists, and certainly not the bloggers. The sooner the better Big Media realizes that to partner with some of the indie bloggers could bring their readers a more well-rounded and exciting fan experience. Better coverage, too. Isn't that the goal or would that, as my mother would say, be too much like right?
In the meanwhile, I hope that the media relations directors who hand out credentials to writers and photographers from all stripes continue to do exactly what they're doing. Because if you want to grow your market, you've got to bring the sport to the people. Twitter, Facebook and live streams facilitate that. In real time, no tape delay allowed.
Passion is contagious. It takes a global army of passionate writers, whether they get paid or not, to cover practice courts and feature rank-and-file players alongside the sport's elite stars and those hyped for future greatness; to tweet red-carpet photos and fans putting on red Speedos in the half-empty stands of an outer court; to bring the atmosphere of a player party/benefit/product promotion to the screens of electronic devices, large and small.
While professional matches may still be contested at country clubs around the world, tennis is no longer a country club sport. Old-school reporting led by excellent writers, some of whom look down their noses at "fans with typewriters"; some of whom won't dare put in newsprint what they say about players in their media-center gossip sessions; some of whom bemoan the presence of bloggers in Miami even as they tweet from their homes half a continent away; some of whom troll blogs with several aliases to post sarcasm, snark and other such foolishness; some of whom don't often give credit where credit is due -- that mess simply won't cut it. Anyone who claims otherwise is simply trying to protect a turf that needs no protecting.
Don't take it personally. It's not about you. It's about the fans. And if we really want to attract and engage more fans, we must continue to meet them exactly where they are.
::
Miami Outtakes
If you blink, you'll miss me. I'm right at the beginning of this video, and twice near the end before and after Tomas Berdych and Lucie Safarova. Was fun to see that broadcast on the big screen above Stadium Court one afternoon.
I'm working on a few big things. Planting for one. A postcript on Miami for two. Both projects are working me.
Ryan Sweeting won his first ATP title in Houston, Caroline Wozniacki won her first Family Circle Cup in Charleston. Wasn't there another event going on somewhere? Nice to see Sweeting dispense with his 70s-porn-video mustache.
It somehow chimes with the decadence of a place, where real estate costs an average of $47650 per sq metre, for it to be one of the most profitable events in terms of ranking points (and hard cash), yet not require it to be mandatory.
Kind of like saying, “To hell with you and your ATP stewardship – mandatory or not, we’ll still get all the best players – hell, they’ll come to us!”
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Rafa
Muzz
Ferru
Yoyo
LEGEND Top Guns Hot Stuff Sympathy Vote
Mock me all you want, but I STILL say Rafa’s ripe for an upset this clay court season.
Novak,Rafa and Fed stole most of my bandwidth this week, but there’s still enough time for a ladies wrap up almost a full week after Miami ended.
We already knew Vika could win a title as big as this (she already did, two years ago), we already knew she’s capable of winning a Slam. We’ve always known.
So are Caro and Vera. So were Dinara, JJ and, dare I say it, Sam Stosur.
When Vika peaked the last time back in 2009, she was, in my opinion, the most credible maiden-Slam contender, second only to Dinara Safina. All of that was put paid to by Serena Williams, time…..after time….after time. And all of those Slam QFs were only possible when she wasn’t injured, passing out in the sun or, you know, dodging falling pianos.
All of which is to say….long time coming girl, but perhaps, now, even more welcome.
And as for those only now discovering that ‘neath that stroppy exterior lurks someone almost as likeable and (dare I say it) “nice” *shudder* as Caro or Kim, well…lets just say a bunch of us were on this bandwagon first; that’s right we’all took the finest seats already – and I’m not even remotely sorry that there’s standing room only.
Why should it be any different from 2009 this time? For one thing, Serena’s (sadly)not around, and it’s not at all clear what shape she’ll be in when she does return. That leaves Kim, with her uber-curtailed Super-Mom schedule. Venus has signalled a return in May, Henin, as we know, is no more. All in all, just as depleted of heavyweight talent as the field was back in 2009. Vika has as good a chance as any to capitalise on this (as does Bepa), but something tells me Woz will be first.
Maria Sharapova’s tennis may be in the gutter – but she is clearly looking at the stars.
A SF followed by a final at the two most prestigious events outside of the Slams – whatever else might be going on with her game, her champions spirit is wholly intact, and just waiting, willing you, daring you to bait it into action. Mock at your peril.
That said, the dysfunction once thought limited to her serve has gone viral.
Even as recently as the middle of last year I was fond of saying that whilst her serve may never again be what it once was, her groundies are (for the most part) looking like a loose approximation of the player I once knew. Not so anymore.
It didn’t go wrong all at once, of course. In the beginning there was light, and only the mere suggestion of the error (unforced or otherwise). UFE soon begat UFE, and it wasn’t long before we began to hear of matches composed, in their entirety, of (50, 60+) UFEs.
The common denominator in all this was an organically-conceived defiance that simply refused to flinch in the face of malfunction: the resulting UFEs were, therefore, long (sometimes horribly so), insupportably wide, but rarely in the net.
The latest and most irksome “anti-feature” is to be found in forehands that flop, comatose, at the bottom of the net.This is not the stuff of netcords.
What really irks, is that she often seems to set up well, and even when she’s been off-footed, you kinda just expect her to shunt it wildly away somewhere in the stands: soulless, complacent, ineffectual grunge is simply not her style.
To put it very bluntly, its difficult to see her, in the immediate future, stringing together the requisite 7/7 matches to win a Slam with this degree of entropy in her system – she’s just as likely to oust Kim as she is to be ousted by a Virginie Razzano (I pledged to pick whoever I found ranked at #100, honest).
Which kinda makes you marvel all the more at what she achieved in these last two events.
The world can sometimes seem irritatingly divided into two groups: the overwhelmingly hormonal, and the irritatingly pedantic. Most of us sit somewhere in the middle. In so far as I fit into any of the two, it would be the latter.
I’m a stickler for form, procedure and detail. I don’t say that with any type of pride – but then I’m not ashamed of it either.
So when most were busy (rightfully) basking in the dizzying, rarefied heights of the last set of the Miami mens final, I was having, what most would think of as, an utterly inconsequential soliloquy on why the preceding two sets couldn’t have been even half as good.
Leaving aside the question of my own idiosyncrasies (some of which are best kept to myself), let us just remind ourselves of what was at stake – because, quite honestly, some of us have simply forgotten.
The world’s top two players (indeed, two of the best ever) contesting the final of what some call the “fifth Slam”. One of them in GOAT contention, who only missed out on the calendar Slam last year by a mere two matches and a physical complaint. The other, the best player on the planet right now, winner of the last Slam, winner of the last 26 matches he’s played.
Call me a stickler, call me a pedant, call me a feckless nutter if you must – but I don’t think I was out of line in demanding something a little more, nor in calling out the first two sets, both of which I felt fell far short of what these two were capable of.
OF COURSE THE WIND WAS A FACTOR.
Question: Have these two not played (well) in wind before? You’d think not given some of the early reactions to the ‘quality’ of the first set.
Isn’t that precisely the kind of impediment they’re supposedly uniquely equipped to overcome? Who, if not the worlds top two players? Who, indeed?
I’m not sure I accept some of the more generous estimates of the role of the wind, but even if we concede the wind rendered conditions largely unplayable, are we to believe all of that suddenly disappeared in the last set? It didn’t.
The somewhat inconvenient answer is that neither Nole nor Rafa were up to scratch. Not initially. Sorry, but there it is. Nole, having not been broken the entire week, was duly broken in his opening game and (third set aside) was as erratic thereafter as he’s been since before his run began. Rafa, listless, lifeless and uncharacteristically restrained (the odd winner aside) had nothing on any of his balls.
Nole picked things up marginally in set two. Rafa, remained largely comatose. All of which is to say, Nole won that 2nd set by simply not letting Rafa get away with the criminal depravity of set one. Nothing more, nothing less. Glad that he did so, but hardly the stuff of epics. Or, for that matter, “the most compelling rivalry in mens tennis”.
Set three was what it was – and what it was, was simply spellbinding. But before we all get too carried away consider this: when these two played in Madrid 2009, they produced this quality over the entire three sets. Worth remembering too that neither were the player they are today.
I realise I’m being a pain, I just don’t believe in letting two of the best players ever get away with junk.
Leaving all that aside, Nole’s run is, of course, something quite special. Its not just the IW/Miami double (Fed’s achieved that twice), it’s not even Oz followed by the Miami double (Fed achieved that too) – its actually DC, followed by Oz, followed by the IW/Miami double – and more importantly, going through some of history’s best players to do this.
In the final set tie break (a set that most expected Rafa to win on fight alone, now that he’d raised his game), Nole did something that I’ve only ever seen one other player (guess who) do when Rafa’s been injury free: run Rafa ragged to a degree that left him winded and bent over double in between subsequent points. He would never recover.
Perhaps this wouldn’t have been possible had Rafa played a more tight first couple of sets. That really is neither here nor there. No one, not even Rafa, is capable of playing every set of every match at 99.99%. Its seems a very strange condition to place on him – and worse, to then blame ‘form’ or ‘injury’ when he’s fails to meet that impossibly high grade. Let us, also, please not forget how poorly Nole played set one – coz I sure as hell haven’t.
The streak will come to an end of course – they always do. I’d argue, in any case, that he seemed to have lost his utterly carnal edge in the last few matches he played in Miami. The bigger question, of course, is what’ll remain in place once he does re-enter earth’s atmosphere. If he’s grown as much as I think he has, we won’t be seeing very much of the self-perpetuating despondency that marred his previous lows during late 2008 and 2009.
One final point about Rafa: ever since the year began, he’s been susceptible to these fleeting, utterlyinexplicable, emotionally crippling lapses in concentration.
They’d be more understandable if they lasted for most of a match – but they tend to wreak their havoc in just a single set or part of a set (see IW final, Miami final or Miami QF vs Berd), and as far as I can tell, don’t proceed from any injury.
What’s perhaps more troubling is his own reaction to it. He’s quickly reduced to a panic-stricken, un-Rafa-like shell, which is something we’ve only seen when he’s badly injured.
How this affects him going into the clay court season remains to be seen – personally, I think Nole’s playing well enough to score his first win over Rafa on clay this year anyway.
Winners post coming up, but I’ve had a multitude of thoughts swirling through my mind since watching Fed go down – oh *so* horribly – to Rafa, which I’m going to try and bring together.
Let me first state what this is not: a rant against the premature write-offs.
I don’t feel the slightest need to rant against that, nor the spectacularly pathological levels of denial some of Fed’s defenders continue to embody: both, I hope you’ll agree, have been done to death – both will continue to perpetuate their self-evident lunacy irrespective of what I or anyone else might have to say
Yet there remains something incredibly galling in hearing the “beginning of the end” eulogies every time Fed suffers a loss like this. What precisely is being insinuated?
Not only is it incredibly boring, it’s also a chronological absurdity: if every loss is the BOTE, then there can’t, by definition, be either a beginning or an end?
But what’s really interesting is this: no one in their right mind seriously disputes that Fed is now in his twilight and/or decline. In so far as we agree on anything, it’s that the BOTE occurred as far back as two (or even three) years ago (when Fed, by the way, was still winning Slams).
I think there’s something more questionable at work (not nearly as sinister as it is morally dubious): stating the obvious in order to confer legitimacy on the entirely spurious.
It’s a well known device, of course, familiar to anyone with even a passing interest in the rhetoric that surrounds religion and politics – both of which seem to conflate impossibly well in the realm of tennis dogma.
1) You start by stating something entirely reasonable, largely indisputable – something known either by necessity, or well within the prevailing consensus.
"We are in an economic crisis”. “We are facing an unprecedented terrorist threat”. “Fed is in decline”. “The beginning of the end”.
2) And then go on to make, either implicitly or explicitly, an inference or extrapolation that, whilst seeming sound and/or innocent enough, simply doesn’t bear any scrutiny whatsoever.
"Deficit reduction, wide-ranging cuts and mass-redundancies is the only way out of the crisis”. “Saddam has WMDs and is in league with Al-Qaida”.
“Fed will never win a Slam again”. “Fed will never beat Rafa or Nole again”.
Umm…
The key to selling the deceit (coz that's what it is) lies in pure stealth: in the implicit, entirelyinsidious suggestion that this secondary inference is either wholly subsumed within, or a necessary consequence of, the original uncontroversial assumption (preferably the former).
Taking stock of of Fed’s opponents as they relate to his current ‘twilight’:
1) There’s the other big-wigs, most notably Rafa and Nole, both of whom he can continue to score wins against, but both who will, it seems, be beating him more often than he does them.
I’m going to leave the question of surfaces out for now, partly because we all know who excels on what, and partly because there’s a dreadful tendency to read way too much into it. [I don’t have a problem admitting that it must necessarily factor into any analysis, but its getting a bit much when people start pretending that match results are almost exclusively determined by an exotic mathematical function of surface, conditions, altitude, frame size and string tension]
Put simply, Rafa will beat Fed 7 times out of 10 because the match up suits him to a tee. This has nothing in the slightest to do with Fed being “over the hill”. It’s simply a matter of fact that by pummelling Fed’s backhand mercilessly with his monster (lefty) forehand, Rafa can win most of their encounters; rather crucially, he doesn’t even need to be at his best to do execute this “strategy” successfully.
People looking for a headline like to paint this as a sign that the SHB is out of date – the rather inconvenient fact that Fed’s “dated” SHB suppresses 90% of the opposition is routinely ignored. The reason it’s a problem against Rafa is that no one hits a forehand like Rafa. No one has ever hit a forehand like Rafa. EVER.
Nole benefits from no such inherent advantage. Its certainly clear that he can beat Fed soundly having not yet been beamed down from whatever planet he’s playing on right now. Need I remind you that since 2011 began he beat Rafa (twice) and everyone else in such a state too?
But leaving aside the question of when the streak will end and when his level will tail off, it does seem reasonable to think that in the long term, his intensity will give him the upper hand.
2) The rest of the competition: aside from irregular, sporadic, Godzilla-like appearances from Berd and Sod (Delpo deliberately left out for now for the sake of simplicity as much as anything else), Fed is winning 80-90% of his matches here –dominating, you might say.
Indeed, since the beginning of the year, Fed has only lost to Nole and Rafa and is actually 2nd in the ATP Race (the now discarded measure of performance based strictly on the current year).
Against this backdrop its crucial to ask, what precisely the purpose is of all these constant allusions to the BOTE; else it simply allows loose tongues to define the landscape by filling in the gap with their own spurious inferences.
Do we see him never winning a Slam again? Possibly, though this is by no means certain.
Do we not see him ever beating Rafa or Nole again? Less often perhaps, but never say never. Nole is on an unprecedented high right now, but it won’t last forever – nothing ever does. And I hardly need add, I hope, that he beat Rafa in straights just over four months ago at the WTF.
What then? Do we see him losing to Olivier Rochus? I should think not.
Yet any, or all, of the above might be reasonably inferred on the basis of the BOTE – depending on how (maliciously) open-ended you leave things, you can argue pretty much anything you want.
My own view is he will continue to suffer losses against those top two (most though not all of the time) whilst still dominating 80-90% of the competition.
Whether or not he’s still winning them, he’ll remain in contention of winning every event he enters until the day he quits.
That would allow him to retire (whenever he chooses) comfortably ensconced in the top ten or top five at some point in the future.
All of this may seem obvious, but say “beginning of the end” (or hear it being invoked) enough times and it begins to insidiously redefine your perspective like some mind-warping spell spun by Lord Voldemort.
I’m not nearly convinced that something so very different is at work here.