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#1541 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: India
Posts: 11,447
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Quote:
quite a few of us have some knowledge of the past, but they don't apply the same standards to today, because today's play is different .... and vice versa ... and one final word : no one is misinterpreting your statements. They are flat out biased and written with an agenda..... Me and zagor are both good enough to read & understand the statements as well as read between the lines. Give me a break !
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Becker,Edberg and Sampras would baggel him ( federer ) on fast indoor or grass more often than not. - the one and only kiki |
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#1542 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: India
Posts: 11,447
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Phoenix1983 :
It is a credit to Rosewall that he reached those wimbledon finals pre-prime and post-prime and not a negative .... he'd have a won a Wimbledon at the very least IMO, if not more ...yes the grass @ the AO and USO suited his game more than @ wimbledon, but he was still good enough to win @ wimbledon if he played at his prime .....
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Becker,Edberg and Sampras would baggel him ( federer ) on fast indoor or grass more often than not. - the one and only kiki |
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#1543 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: India
Posts: 11,447
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Quote:
not like the one match examples which you are choosing bigger thing is the actual sample size which is the indoor tournaments played by them over the years , which is much more ... if you were just wondering why their matches indoors weren't close, I wouldn't have said much at all .... its just that you raised the possibility of them being on an even footing indoors ... as far as the part of being of being a great player and giving tough matches to a player on any surface goes, that's not always true .. wilander wasn't tough for becker/lendl indoors sampras wasn't tough for anyone decent on clay ditto for becker .... again, this is where I think you over-rate the adaptability part of nadal ...... yes, he's good at it, very good , but not that good .....and the conditions today have helped him quite a bit at adapting from surface to surface .... unlike for a certain bjorn borg and nadal isn't as versatile as federer ... finally @ the end of the year part, it may be true to an extent on some occasions, but that can't be an excuse all the time .....put clay at the end of the year and you can be rest assured nadal would still dominate as a matter of fact, at the YECs, he was injured in 2005, 2008 and didn't play ... in 2006, 2007, he was playing well and federer defeated him convincingly ... in 2009, he was in pretty poor form, probably his worst form there, but he didn't even face federer then .. in 2010, he was well-prepared and got through to the finals without losing a RR match ... yet federer got him 6-1 in the 3rd ... in 2011, he took a month off before the YEC, and federer blitzed him in their RR match ...
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Becker,Edberg and Sampras would baggel him ( federer ) on fast indoor or grass more often than not. - the one and only kiki |
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#1544 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,146
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I often don't accept things people say in sports as fact when I first hear it. I decide to QUESTION and try to research things to see if it's true and WHY it is true. So I wondered about something concerning Federer and Nadal. It seemed like a reasonable thing to think about. People for some reason got annoyed instead of simply answering the question to my satisfaction. I researched the question myself and got the answer. I wrote that the people were correct and STILL PEOPLE ARE UPSET. Why?? Because I dared to check the "why" behind the given. Are we suppose to accept everything that is a sports axiom? I've done research in a number of sports over the years and one thing I've thing is that things that are supposed to be givens in sports are not always true. One of my good friends is perhaps the foremost sports researcher in the United States and he has changed records that have been idolized by sports fans. Why? Because the so called records were incorrect. People were actually upset that he changed the records which to my mind made no sense. Last edited by pc1 : 12-15-2012 at 11:20 AM. |
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#1545 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 1,646
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#1546 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,307
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In this matter Phoenix is surely wrong. It's even debatable if the Wimbledon grass did not suit Rosewall's game. Rosewall did beat at Wimbledon players like Trabert, Seixas, Newcombe, Roche and Smith when being very young and very till extremely old. |
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#1547 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,307
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#1548 |
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Legend
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,656
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Rosewall is the one I have the hardest time ranking. I think he could be easily as high as #1 or #2 or as low as #6 or #7. I do think he easily had the best longevity of any great player ever. He was one of the 3 or 4 best players in the World for about 20 years, that is insane. It is also incredible he was the Worlds best clay courter for most of that time, in some ways he might be the real Clay GOAT even more than Nadal, and certainly above Borg atleast. Yet despite that as old as 36 and 37 in 71 and 72 he was also beating Laver who many still considered the best at that point in big matches on faster courts like the two WTF finals, which Laver desperately wanted to win, and at 39 or 40 besting the likes of John Newcombe on grass at Wimbledon and the U.S Open in 1974. My only issue with him in comparision to some of the others, especialy Laver, Gonzales, Sampras, and Federer, is he wasnt the Worlds best player nearly as long. Only about 2 or 3 years (Mustard even estimates it down at 2), which is much shorter than all those others. The others he was always generally 2nd or 3rd.
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TMF on Jan. 2011- Serena is washed up for good, TMF in Oct. 2009- Nadal has won his final slam, TMF in 2011- Woz will beat Serena at U.S Open |
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| NadalAgassi |
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#1549 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,448
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#1550 |
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Legend
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,656
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but was he one of the best in the World and a potential contender for slams had there been Open Era slams for that whole time, or 20 years plus? If not I still think it is Rosewall.
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TMF on Jan. 2011- Serena is washed up for good, TMF in Oct. 2009- Nadal has won his final slam, TMF in 2011- Woz will beat Serena at U.S Open |
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| NadalAgassi |
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#1551 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,146
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Tilden has every stroke. He had a great forehand, excellent backhand, a great serve, super movement and excellent stamina. His volley was okay but not great but he did win many a doubles titles so it was fine. He was also obsessed with studying the game. He was about 6'2" tall and I have no doubt if he played today he would have adapted easily to the tennis of today. Last edited by pc1 : 12-15-2012 at 03:09 PM. |
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#1552 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,448
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Tilden's post-1946 career was severely affected by the scandals involving him, including jail time, but he continued to play sporadically up to 1952. A 60 year old Tilden was actually on his way to play at the 1953 US Pro tournament in Cleveland when he died of a massive stroke. |
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#1553 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,656
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TMF on Jan. 2011- Serena is washed up for good, TMF in Oct. 2009- Nadal has won his final slam, TMF in 2011- Woz will beat Serena at U.S Open |
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| NadalAgassi |
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#1554 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,146
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#1555 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,656
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TMF on Jan. 2011- Serena is washed up for good, TMF in Oct. 2009- Nadal has won his final slam, TMF in 2011- Woz will beat Serena at U.S Open |
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| NadalAgassi |
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#1556 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,307
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The Little Master had bad luck insofar as his career coincided with Laver's and Gonzalez'. In his clashes with Rod he was rather old in most years (1965 till the end) in comparison to a four years younger Laver! In 1965 and 1966 he was pretty close to Rocket. I rank Rosewall 16 times among the top 3, together with Gonzalez. I think that Rosewall's lack of long domination as clear No.1 is compensated by his other super records: 23 majors won, 2 WCT finals won, 9 majors won in a row, positive balance against all other greats at big events, longevity and other feats. I'm glad you rank Rosewall at least No.6 or 7, probably higher. Not all posters are doing that way... Last edited by BobbyOne : 12-15-2012 at 05:28 PM. |
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#1557 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,307
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Mustard, I agree that Tilden must be considered as possibly greatest regarding longevity. The years of playing don't count too much because Tilden was weak in his first years and in his last years. But I rank him very high because he almost won a match against pro champion, Riggs in 1946 when he was already 53!!! However: Rosewall was ranked at No.2 by Tingay for 1974 when he turned 40, a feat never reached by Tilden. But Tilden was great in 1939, at 46 when he thrice beat Budge...
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#1558 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,146
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#1559 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 151
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Thanks
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www.thetennisreview.com Drama, tears and tantrums as Dimitrov dusts up Djokovic. |
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| fluffyyelloballz |
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#1560 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 2,808
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1. fed: he has the rafa issue and no strong opponents from 04-05 but career slam, longest no.1 and most slams. also probably GOAT in both W (most important slam) and USO. he also continued to win from 08-12 despite facing very strong opponents and not being the youngest guy.
2. laver: most dominant of all despite missing his prime years but I don't reward for "what if" and he did not have very strong opponents 3. pete: a lot of slams plus owned his main rivals. he also had to face a lot of good opponents. but he was just too weak on clay to be considered GOAT. no career slam 4.borg: very dominant and could have won more if not his early retirement and AO skipping. but again no what ifs so he is 4th 5. rafa: 11 slams plus owning the GOAT on clay. their h2h is skewed but even baby nadal could keep up with prime fed on every surface. however not good enough in the AO and USO to be considerd higher. career slam is nice but just one title each is a little thin. he is behind borg because borg dominated two slams vs rafas 1 6.connors: most tournaments won and very long no.1 and also missed some more slams because of AO skipping. however he did not have the best opponents (laver was old and borg not yet there), when borg took over he beat connors most of the time (especially 79-81 when connors did not win a single match) 7.from here it becomes tough. I go with lendl at 7 8.I go with macenroe since agassi was owned so much by pete 9.agassi: career slam and very long and successsfull career although he was owned by sampras 10. djokovic: not the most slams but he had to face a slightly past prime fed and prime nadal as probably the best opposition ever. murray is not bad either. |
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| dominikk1985 |
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