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#2041 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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Kozeluh was a seven times world champion. Tilden was awesome in 1932 and about as strong as the best amateurs. For 1931 some posters here (not me) rank Big Bill even No.1. Nüsslein was very strong indoors, see his great match against Budge at WEmbley. Nüsslein's win over Vines in 1934 was not amazing (but still great) because he usually beat him on clay... Cochet was very strong in 1936. he never won a set against Nüsslein in all of their ten matches. Cochet won several amateur tournaments after WW2! |
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#2042 | ||||||
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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so, Nadal victories over Federer on clay are not amazing because he usually beat him there? Quote:
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| FedericRoma83 |
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#2043 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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Why only four majors for Kozeluh? He also was seven times world champion in the 1920s (Deauville and Beaulieu). I agree that Cochet was weaker as a pro as an amateur till 1933. But he was still rather strong in the 1930s and even after the war (when he won tournaments against strong players). Last edited by BobbyOne : 01-08-2013 at 10:31 AM. |
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#2044 | ||
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Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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| FedericRoma83 |
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#2045 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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Federic, don't you value the 1972 and 1973 Wimbledon as majors because many pros were absent?
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#2046 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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The 1972 edition was surely a Major: many absent, but also many strong players. On the contrary, I don't count the 1973 edition as a Major: only one of the top-10 players, it was the weakest Slam of the Open Era (except some A.O. editions).
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| FedericRoma83 |
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#2047 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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Wimbledon 1972 yes (with only 3 or 4 top players participating) and W.1973 no (with two top players participating)? That's too accidental. Last edited by BobbyOne : 01-08-2013 at 12:01 PM. |
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#2048 | ||
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Legend
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 7,145
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Incidentally the 1973 Wimbledon had Ilie Nastase, Jan Kodes and Jimmy Connors, Metrevili, Roger Taylor and a young Borg. Nastase, Kodes and Taylor were originally seeded before the boycott. Connors would not have been but in retrospect he was probably deserving of one of the top few seeds, imo probably top five considering his record and strength. Admittedly majors at times can lose prestige like the Australian Open for a number of years. Clearly the Year End Masters and the WCT Championship was de facto majors at that time. Last edited by pc1 : 01-08-2013 at 12:06 PM. |
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#2049 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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On the contrary, at W '72 we had Smith and Nastase (two best players that season), Kodes (seeded #8 at the US Open, so he was a top-10 at Wimbledon also), and Orantes (#10 at the US Open, he may have not been at Wimbledon, but was surely near). W' 72 Smith #1 at the time of the tournament Nastase #4 at the time of the tournament, but #1 or 2 that season Kodes around #8 at the time of the tournament Orantes probably a top-10 at the time of the tournament (not sure, anyway) W' 73 Nastase #1 at the time of the tournament Kodes #15 at the time of the tournament (#9 in the year-end chart) Moreover, W' 73 missed 80-85 of the top-100 players, while W '72 missed only WCT Players. It is not the same thing in my opinion. W 1972 was obviously depleted, but four top-10 and many top-100 is way better than just one top-10 and a few top-100. Last edited by FedericRoma83 : 01-08-2013 at 01:28 PM. |
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#2050 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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I mean, with today's rankings, W '72 would look like this:
#1 seed Djokovic #2 seed Federer #3 seed Tsonga #4 seed Gasquet ...and W '73 like this: #1 seed Djokovic #2 seed Raonic Which one is better? |
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| FedericRoma83 |
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#2051 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: The Black Lodge
Posts: 3,954
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http://www.worldtennismagazine.com/archives/6007
Thought this was an interesting read, the list is by a man born in 1912 and seen it all up to the Federer and Nadal era. Scroll down to see his list.
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The Black Lodge Military Visionary at your service... |
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| forzamilan90 |
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#2052 |
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Legend
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Bierlandt
Posts: 9,964
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Then I guess Budge's GS does not count either.
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The smart man thinks he knows a lot; the wise man is aware that he knows little. |
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#2053 |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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| FedericRoma83 |
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#2054 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Bristol, England
Posts: 18,441
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The official majors, as designated by the ITF since 1924-1925, are the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US Open. Strength of the draw doesn't change the fact that they have officially been majors since then. The players who showed up and won the tournaments deserve full credit for doing so. Also, those who missed certain majors because of political disputes/bans/strikes etc. shouldn't have it held against them when we look at their career records. For example, Vilas deserves full credit for winning the 1977 French Open, but it shouldn't be held against Borg as a player that he played WTT and made himself ineligible for the 1977 French Open. But Borg's decision still needs to be recognised as his personal decision, a choice that he made. For that reason, Vilas gets full credit for winning the French Open while Borg doesn't lose any credibility as a player for choosing WTT. Multi-dimensional, dialectical thinking is required on issues like this. It isn't black and white. Last edited by Mustard : 01-08-2013 at 07:14 PM. |
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#2055 | |||
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 185
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On the other hand, the Pro circuit was soooo badly organized until 1938. That year Vines was on tour and he didn't enter a tournament, the same for Perry (he entered just a weak US Pro were he was the only strong player). Tilden and Nusslein played tournaments where they were the only two top-tier players, never facing Vines or Perry. Considering that, I think that the four classic Slam tournaments (all won by Donald Budge) were still the best ones (even if they were missing a lot of names). Things changed radically in 1939: since that year, the Pro circuit started to be well organized, and top players started to enter tournaments with regularity. Moreover, for the first time in tennis history, the top-4 players were all Pro (Budge, Perry, Vines, Nusslein). I think that if there's a year were Pro tennis definitely surpassed amateur tennis, it was 1939 (obviously it didn't happen all of sudden, but it was the culmination of a gradual process). Quote:
I agree with you on RG 1977, but it wasn't always so easy. We aren't talking only about Borg (it was a personal choice). At Wimbledon 1973 80-85 players over 100 boycotted the event (only one top-10 played): if we have to enstablish who was stronger in 1973 we really can't consider Wimbledon. It was still a Major, but only nominally, it doesn't help us to understand who was stronger, because strong players weren't there (except Nastase and Kodes, and Kodes wasn't a top-10 in that moment anyway). If we go back to the Pro Era things are even more difficult to understand because there weren't exact parameters. A tournament had a strong field in the year X, but then it disappeared, or changed surface and location the next year. Moreover, some Pro players used to tour. To understand who were the strongers from the WWII to 1967 our only possibility is to find the best Pro tournaments year after year and analize them. Not necessarily a Pro Slam was a good tournament (in 1960-61-62 US Pro was just insignificant), on the contrary some tournaments were not Pro Slam but they were Majors "de facto" (i.e. World's Hard Court Pro in Los Angeles, 1945, not a Pro Slam but the only real Major that year). Quote:
We had the same identical discussion about a year ago, Mustard. I guess some things never change, ahahah Last edited by FedericRoma83 : 01-08-2013 at 09:52 PM. |
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#2056 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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#2057 | |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: India
Posts: 11,447
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13 out of 16 top players not present 81 players boycotted it in total by far worst Wimbledon in the open era.
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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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#2058 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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#2059 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 3,302
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#2060 |
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G.O.A.T.
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: India
Posts: 11,447
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agree .... that list is weird ... I don't agree with many of the choices ..
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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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