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#21 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 19
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Quote:
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| PanchoGonzalesTheGreatest |
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#22 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 3,570
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Quote:
__________________
Intellectuals solve problems, Geniuses prevent them RAFA2005RG- "If he (Rafa) lost Roland Garros it would be like death." |
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| RF20Lennon |
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#23 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,292
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Quote:
Federer has now three tough opponents or 5 if we include Berdych and del Potro who are not really consistent. Gonzalez had Kramer, Budge, Trabert, Hoad, Rosewall, Sedgman, Segura, Laver Gimeno, Newcombe, Roche, Ashe and Smith to name the most important. In the 1950s pro tour Gonzalez, Sedgman, Segura, Rosewall, Hoad and Trabert played often against each other in one tournament. Day after day an all-time great... |
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#24 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 3,570
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Quote:
__________________
Intellectuals solve problems, Geniuses prevent them RAFA2005RG- "If he (Rafa) lost Roland Garros it would be like death." |
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| RF20Lennon |
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#25 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 2,316
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Yet he was barely ranked when they had the GOAT tennis list a few months back on ESPN or whatever it was
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#26 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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Think of it this way I don't think the players are that tough when guys like Nadal and Djokovic complain about playing on Blue Clay. Laver and Gonzalez once played the US Pro in 1964 in a horrible rainstorm in which the court conditions were described as a bog. They had to play because the next day they had to go to another tournament. Ken Rosewall for example in 1957 played about 172 matches. Rod Laver in 1963 played 147 matches, in 1964 he played a mere 98 matches. In 1966 118 matches. In 1969 a mere 122 matches. Pancho Gonzalez played Jack Kramer on a tour from October 1949 to June of 1950 in which they played 123 matches. That's 123 matches in about eight months just on the tour. They may have played some tournaments and one night stands in between the tour. I believe Kramer did play several tournaments during that time and Gonzalez played at least one tournament I know of. That's a lot of tennis. |
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#27 |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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It was on the Tennis Channel. It was a ridiculous superficial way of looking at players. They is NO WAY Roy Emerson ranks ahead of Pancho Gonzalez but he was higher than Gonzalez on that Tennis Channel list. I think (not sure) he was a lot higher than Pancho Gonzalez.
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#28 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,292
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As Carlo Colussi once wrote: Any top ten list without Gonzalez (and Rosewall) is a bad list... Bud Collins meant in a phone call that the list was a joke and made to provoke various answers. Nevertheless I find it a scandal. They also could have ranked Bill Scanlon 3rd and Owen Davidson 7th... |
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#29 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,292
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#30 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,385
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It's quite incredible that people who are supposed to be experts don't know how the tennis world worked in those days, and that the top professionals were much better players than the top amateurs.
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#31 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 9,289
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| Limpinhitter |
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#32 |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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One of the reasons they rank by majors alone is that it is the easiest way to rank. How much easier is it to simply count majors? It's too simplistic and they conveniently forget the rest of the tournament schedule outside of the majors.
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#33 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,292
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Yes, and therefore it's so important to present the list of the big pro majors additionally to the GS tournaments.
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#34 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,385
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Unfortunately for them, tennis history is the exact opposite of simplistic.
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#35 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,292
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#36 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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Quote:
Federer is obviously a great player but it does bother me when some refuse to understand that greats like Gonzalez had no chance to get to 17 majors because he wasn't allowed to play during his best years and even past his best years. You can't just count majors in the case of players like Gonzalez and many in the past like Tilden who couldn't travel from country to country in hours like they do now. If the Tennis Channel "experts" realized that and looked into the true accomplishments of these players maybe the list would have been far different. |
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#37 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,385
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From the end of WW2 up until the start of the open era, apart from Roy Emerson, not one player dominated in the amateur majors for long, and that's because the best amateur players would turn professional. Kramer was dominant in the amateurs in 1946 and 1947, then turned professional, with Pails and Segura joining him. Gonzales turned professional after successfully defending his US Championships title and needing the money for his family. Sedgman turned pro in late 1952 after such a good period as an amateur. Ditto later on with McGregor, Trabert, Rosewall, Hoad, Cooper, Anderson, Olmedo, Gimeno, MacKay, Buchholz etc. Instead of them recognising that these players moved onto the professional game, i.e. to bigger things, why do I get the impression that they think these players fell off the face of the Earth instead? |
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#38 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,385
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#39 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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Quote:
If the same conditions existed today of course top players like Nadal, Djokovic and Federer would turn Pro because they won amateur majors. Guess who would still be an amateur because he didn't dominate and win a major---Andy Murray! Maybe Murray would have won a lot of amateur majors now if the old system still existed. Federer would not have 17 classic majors because he would be a Pro, same with the others. Maybe by now Murray would have reached Roy Emerson type status because he may have dominated the amateurs. The Old system changed tennis records. Last edited by pc1 : 09-06-2012 at 05:02 PM. |
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#40 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Home of the 2010 Winter Olympics
Posts: 2,046
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Good post, but this is fantasy for sure. Gonzales had played in probably 1500 documented matches, probably more (I'm just guessing). That's thousands of opportunities to serve for a set or match. There's no way he held serve every time. Apocryphal claim.
Last edited by TheFifthSet : 09-06-2012 at 08:48 PM. |
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| TheFifthSet |
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