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| View Poll Results: Who is Greater, McEnroe or Connors? | |||
| McEnroe |
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38 | 42.70% |
| Connors |
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40 | 44.94% |
| undecided |
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11 | 12.36% |
| Voters: 89. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1 |
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Professional
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 960
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8 Grand slams for Connors versus 7 for McEnroe; Jimmy had more titles but McEnroe had a more varied resume with grand slam doubles wins.
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#2 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: OREGON
Posts: 2,349
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A peanut butter sandwich is dry. A jelly sandwich lacks substance. Something special happens when you put jelly on one side of sandwich and Peanut butter on the other. Nothing is greater than a McEnroe/ Conners match except a Connors /McEnroe match. I know that is not the answer you meant but still. Sadly I can't for the life of me find PB&J on a tennis court anymore.
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#3 |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Here today, probably here tomorrow...
Posts: 29
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Hard one this. I'll go for Connors, just for more titles, matches won and GS...
McEnroe close behind him though. |
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#4 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 2,626
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McEnroe at his peak was a better player in 1984. However, Connors had a much longer career at the top of the game. Hence Peak vs Longevity. Its up to your opinion as to what is more important. I go with Connors.
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#5 |
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Professional
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,097
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Raw talent, hands down, it is McEnroe. Really, he did not accomplish as much as he could've/should've with his skill set...and having said that, he accomplished an awful lot. Particularly when he was faced w/Borg/Lendl/Connors/Wilander during his heyday. I don't think we have seen quite that level of competition simultaneously in some time. (maybe sampras/agassi/courier/chang/edberg period comes close, but not quite IMHO)
Mac also had a fantastic doubles record, plus Davis Cup behind him. So that also makes me want to pick him. But, if you look at just singles, plus all matches over all surfaces, over entire career, it is hard not to go for Jimmy. Yes, there are some matches that he too should have won....his GS record should be a bit fatter....but overall, great diversity across surfaces, big wins in big places (W & USO), huge # of match wins and titles. In his mid to late 30's he was still a very tough player, even if he was no longer winning the GS events, he was still beating most of those beneath him and held a top level ranking (from #4 to low teens, I seem to recall, before he busted his wrist in '90). Mac v. Connors matches were usually such ragged affairs...you never knew what was going to happen, who was going to be "on" their game or "off" ...and who might blow up first.... I actually found some of their seniors matches quite entertaining.... |
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#6 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: hong kong
Posts: 4,746
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mcenroe won more grandies. obviously.
__________________
Western Grip, Counter-puncher Lefty... Dunlop Maxply Mcenroe (Serve), Dunlop Aerogel 4D 300 Tour (Return)... |
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#7 |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 962
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#8 | |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: hong kong
Posts: 4,746
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Quote:
__________________
Western Grip, Counter-puncher Lefty... Dunlop Maxply Mcenroe (Serve), Dunlop Aerogel 4D 300 Tour (Return)... |
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#9 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,733
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Close call. As said, Mac had more potential with his pingpong-like half volley-style, while Connors was a great pure striker of the ball. On matchup: Mac was always more vulnerable against hard hitters like Lendl or Connors, than against topspinners like Borg. On grass, Mac was potentially way ahead, but still Connors held him quite even at Wim and Queens. On clay, it was close between them, with Connors maybe a nod ahead overall. On hard courts, over the hill Connors was still able to give prime Mac fits in 1984.
Mac should have won more majors, especially on grass. Many of his final losses in majors were very close five set affairs, while Connors, when he lost, he lost quite decisively. So Connors got the most out of his career, while Mac didn't fullfil his potential. |
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#10 |
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Posts: 4,488
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Connors was unlucky in many respects I feel. To not play the French Open during his best years from 1974-1978 due to the fallout of that 74 ban, and miss out on a possible/probable Calander Slam in 74 due to the ban. To play at a time the Australian Open wasnt that valued as a slam. For it to be the only years in history the U.S Open would be played on clay right in the heart of his prime from 75-77, and end up losing 2 U.S Open titles to two clay courters who would have no shot against him on either grass or decoturf. If all these things had been different he even could have had 14 or 15 slams, certainly alot more than 8.
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#11 |
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Banned
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 3,594
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Connors. Results are what matter, not potential. Not that McEnroe didnt have an outstanding career in his own right, he certainly did, but overall Connors clearly had the better career.
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| grafselesfan |
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#12 |
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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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Doubles matter too. The fact that McEnroe was one of the greatest doubles AND singles players of all time has to be taken into consideration, IMO.
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| TheFifthSet |
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#13 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 3,594
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Quote:
If doubles were that valued than Navratilova, Court, and King would be the undisputed 3 female GOATs of the Open Era and yet most have Court behind Graf and even possibly Evert, while King isnt rated up there at the very top. |
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| grafselesfan |
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#14 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Hotel CA
Posts: 4,180
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I would pick Mac over Jimbo because of doubles and Davis Cup. McEnroe was ranked the World No. 1 in doubles for a record 257 weeks and won four at Wimbledon and three at the US Open. The U.S. Davis Cup teams that Mac supported for 15 years and was part of U.S. winning teams in 1979, 1981, 1982, and 1992. Mac set numerous U.S. Davis Cup records, including years played (12), ties (30), singles wins (41), and total wins in singles and doubles (59). He played both singles and doubles in 13 series, and he and Peter Fleming won 14 of 15 Davis Cup doubles matches together.
Last edited by joe sch : 09-12-2009 at 06:26 PM. |
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#15 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Croatia
Posts: 292
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Quote:
__________________
''It was frustrating. You know, it was miserable. It sucked. It was terrible. Besides that, it was fine.''- Roddick after his semifinal loss at AO 07 |
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#16 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 3,733
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Yes, Joe Sch, the DC gives Mac a big bonus. Besides: i remember an extraordinary team event, the WTC final in 1985 or 86, when Mac and Connors (and Flach/Seguso) were pitted against the strong Czech team of Lendl and Mecir. Mac lost to Lendl, and Connors saved the day, when he beat Mecir, who had a big lead and got tight and began to serve underhand.
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#17 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 4,555
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McEnroe and Connors were two great Americans. When it comes to Head to Head, McEnroe was the better player, he actually beat Connors 11 straight times and he has a 20-14 lifetime record against him. However Connors has more titles compared to McEnroe, 108-77 and an 8-7 grand slam edge. Also Connors had more longevity on your, he made it to the semi's at the 1991 US Open at the age of 39, that was amazing.
So when it comes to head to head, McEnroe was the better player, but overall Connors has the better numbers. |
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#18 | |
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Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Posts: 962
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#19 | |
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Banned
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 1,290
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Quote:
It's not realistic or fair to compare an old and not prime connors against a prime mcenroe or Lendl who are seven and eight years younger. Connors is being punished for still competing at an old age. |
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#20 |
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Professional
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,097
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yes, connors lost more matches after he passed 35yrs of age....tho', ironically one of his last titles came in '89 when he beat Mac in straight sets in the Tolouse (FR) final...he was 37yrs old, (Mac was what then? 31 or 32?)....I recall Mac saying that Connors played some fantastic tennis...
The Mecir match referenced above was World Team Cup...I think it may have been '86 ; Mecir had a lead in the 5th, got tight and Connors climbed right back to win. And, it was on RED clay...shocking, huh? anyways, I could flip a coin between these 2...they both are worthy, each for slightly different reasons..... |
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