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#1 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 744
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A tennis prodigy emerges.
After a juniors career where he blew everyone off the court he wins his first major at the AO in 2019 Then he gets on the sickest, hottest streak ever and also reels off the next 7 majors for a double consecutive Calendar Year Slam. In a few of those tournaments he never drops serve. In addition he wins a significant number of the masters in those two years, and wins the 2020 Olympic Gold. he also wins the WTF both seasons. The era before he started winning was considered medium strong (there were a few multi-slam winners in near-prime form on tour) Then his private jet crashes on the way to the 2021 AO and he tragically dies. Prior to this somewhere around his 5th or 6th consecutive majors people were wondering if we were witnessing a new GOAT. This player was lethal on all surfaces equally. So he ends his life with "only" 8 majors, a gold, a WTF, "only" 100 weeks at #1. But he'd blown EVERY one of his peers off the court for 2 straight years, passed the eyeball test of just looking the part of the perfect game, had a positive H2H against every opponent he'd played more than twice. Could this player be a GOAT without surpassing any of the grand slam champions? |
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#2 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,746
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Maureen Connolly.
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#3 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 12,556
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This is your answer. I had to google her. So no, this person would never be considered the greatest in history. Though he would not quickly be forgotten, if at all, tennis is about what you achieve mostly. Not about how, or when, or in which time. That's why I also never get the thing where people say someone should retire to 'protect his legacy'.
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#4 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Brighton, England.
Posts: 1,596
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#5 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 12,556
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Quote:
That tells you that in history, what ifs are important, but not as important as people who actually did what they were destined to do, as opposed to people who never got the chance. |
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#6 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Brighton, England.
Posts: 1,596
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Quote:
saying you've not heard of little mo connolly is like you havnt heard of monica seles or tracy austin...as you say you are a casual fan, thats fair enough.... anyway, now you know, so its no big deal |
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#7 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 744
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interesting, had never heard of maureen connolly. She had a pretty sick run.
I can't help but think that the theoretical person I'm talking about though in the modern era would by hyped up a lot more, would have a lot more video around to prove their dominance, etc. However, I also suppose you could compare this person to Monica Seles since he career was rocking before the stab job. I guess what i'm talking about though is absolute dominance to the highest order... no one was touching this guy... and in an era where everyone has the same access to top rate coaching, conditioning, equipment, etc. |
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#8 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,945
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Tennis history is so complex, with ever changing and evolving equipment as well, that I don't see how there can be a tennis GOAT.
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#9 |
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Legend
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,249
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I'd say that on paper a player like this would definitely be one of the all time greats with a strong argument for being the greatest ever. He'd be in the running though, as would several other players. How much did the player impact professional tennis though? How influential was he in terms of affecting those that followed? These things are also factors in my view. To be one of the greatest players ever, with as many great tennis players as there has been, requires more than a large number of titles and records. The greatest players leave a mark that transcends the game and influences generations that follow them.
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Borg never pointed to himself. He never even seemed to care if anyone read the advertisements. — Tom Callahan |
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#10 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 744
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Quote:
Some say he impacted it positively because he was a great role model and excellent for the sport. He was every bit the media and commercial success that Federer is. However some say he impacted it negatively because he was so dominant that it left little intrigue in the match. He was so dominant without dropping sets and consistently bageling, breadsticking, and golden setting people that he never had any signature legendary 5 set matches, or any type of a real rival. IN fact, on internet tennis message boards, people were beginning to wonder whether the player was actually brilliant or if the era was unbelievably weak. Going into the 2021 AO there was little hope for anyone else to win, if you wanted to bet on him it was 1/5 that he would win the title. 2/1 that he'd win it without dropping a set. If he had a real mark it was that every time he changed surfaces, he changed his game just a little to optimize on that surface. But really his trademark was the absolute blowouts |
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#11 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,249
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Quote:
__________________
Borg never pointed to himself. He never even seemed to care if anyone read the advertisements. — Tom Callahan |
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#12 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,945
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When Sampras won his 13th and 14th majors, I don't think Sampras thought that any player would get near those totals for decades, especially as the 1998-2003 period had a load of different major winners.
From 1998-2003 (a 6 year period), the following players won majors: Petr Korda Carlos Moya Pete Sampras Patrick Rafter Yevgeny Kafelnikov Andre Agassi Gustavo Kuerten Marat Safin Goran Ivanisevic Lleyton Hewitt Thomas Johansson Albert Costa Juan Carlos Ferrero Roger Federer Andy Roddick Yet from 2004-2012 (a 9 year period): Roger Federer Gaston Gaudio Marat Safin Rafael Nadal Novak Djokovic Juan Martin del Potro Andy Murray |
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#13 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 2,710
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Borg certainly would have won more slams had he not retired.
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#14 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 2,823
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Unfortunately, they wouldn't be the GOAT for me. As cruel as this sounds, you haven't done it until you've done it. But I'd have this player as one of my top 10 GOATs for sure, possibly even top 5.
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#15 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 2,345
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Only if he has a negative H2H with biggest rival, if he is poor player on clay or if he played in the sixties of the last century
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"You are not special. You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake. You're the same decaying organic matter as everything else." - Durden |
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#16 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: london
Posts: 1,678
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__________________
Roger's failures on clay eclipse the totality of Pete's career on clay | Federer, the nephew uncle Toni never had | TTW's official ******* trollhunter |
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#17 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 744
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Quote:
that type of a player would definitely be the biggest "what if" stories of our time. Boy that would make for some boring matches. 100% first serve... and i'm guessing his serve is massive.... you'd have 5 set matches over in 1:15 |
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#18 |
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Professional
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 1,383
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He would be undoubtedly the best player of some "mini" era (those two years) and as BIG a "what if" as you could get.
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#19 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 2,636
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A similar thing happened at the 1999 US Open (golf). The winner died in a tragic plane accident, but I don't think this would actually make them the GOAT.
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#20 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,945
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That was Payne Stewart. Seles and Connolly were utterly dominant in their sport before the stabbing/horse riding accident, while Stewart was one of many strong golfers at the time of his death.
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