Risk and Reward: Federer & tennis today

War Safin!

Professional
Apologies if anyone's posted this (I didnt find it in a Search), and apologies if anyone's bored silly about court-surfaces, baseline-grinders, etc, but i thought this piece from yesterday was a great read:


RISK AND REWARD
by Pete Bodo / Tennis.com

Roger Federer is approaching 31 years of age, by which time the reflexes and explosiveness of the typical pro are, along with some other qualities, in decline. It ought to be especially true on fast hard courts, but it's a testament to the all-time Grand Slam champion that the quick surface is the one on which he is still at his most dazzling.

Watching the current world No. 3 in Dubai this week, I repeatedly got the feeling that nobody—including Federer—understands just how heavy a price he's paid for having to play on courts that, even in his time, were getting slower and slower. He ought to sue the ATP and ITF for loss of employment opportunity. But he's won 16 Grand Slam titles!, you say. Well, there is that. . .

Still. The way Federer has been playing in Dubai (and at other locations for months on end now) is nothing less than eye-popping. On fast hard courts, those most basic talents—quickness, accuracy, reactions, timing—assume an importance they lack on slow courts, especially clay. On fast hard courts, Federer looks like Prometheus Unbound. And that's something that, frankly, I've never taken note of before.

I'm not sure why I haven't picked up on some of this stuff before now; can Dubai's hard courts really be that different? All I know is that above and beyond anything pertinent to his own situation, Federer also gives us an exclusive view of what tennis can be like when played in a certain way on a hard court.

Thus, these speculations are just as much about style and surface properties as they are about Federer per se.

Here's my beef with slow courts: As agreeable as it can be to see a gifted player hit 18 or 19 different shots in a rally, time and time again, the payoff for bold, aggressive play is inadequate. Actually, it's poor. As a result, stamina, prudent shotmaking, and defensive skill assume paramount importance, and we've just defined your typical tough out on clay—your David Ferrer. It can be fun watching a Ferrer at work, but a little of it goes a long way for me.

The low premium on bold play and the diminished role of the serve on slow courts change the way the game is played, greatly reducing the variety of shots we see. That's another point Federer has driven home, although not many other players well-suited to fast courts can do it so effectively.

It's no coincidence that the evolution of the two-handed backhand as the shot of choice went hand in hand with a decline in the use of slice and the slowing of the courts. For the record, I like the two-hander as a weapon, but I'll be the first to admit that it's a one-dimensional tool. As Rafael Nadal learned in the Australian Open final, the use of slice these days on most courts is an invitation to surrender the impetus in a point.

By contrast, if you've watched Federer this week, you've seen some stuff that looks like it belongs in a sepia-tinted photo or clattering newsreel. The sliced backhand has myriad manifestations, most of them neglected these days by the vast majority of players, from the chop to the well-timed block (call it a groundstroke volley) to the approach shot.

Approach shot? Who knew there's still such a thing in this era!

I don't know about you, but I get more pleasure out of watching a gifted player like Federer smack two or three balls off either wing to get a point over with than I do seeing those asp-ish shots tracked down and lofted back, as if his opponent is saying, "Try again. Three for a dollar." The higher incidence of errors, unforced and otherwise, and the greater number of shanks and Yeee-Haw! mishits that fast-court tennis coughs up bothers me not one bit. I prefer a blazing shootout to witnessing two men bludgeon each other to death.

On slower surfaces, any number of factors—including sheer luck—can have a far greater impact on the hold game than on fast surfaces. That's because of the premium on the serve, the single most important shot in the game, and the one on which the entire sensibility of the scoring system is based. As we gravitate more and more toward a rally-based game, it becomes that much harder to find clear turning points or even simple tactical or strategic explanations for what happened in any given match.

Generally speaking, a high-level match on a fast court between competent servers has two or three key moments per set. On a slow court, a high-level match often has a bewildering number of important moments. But you know how it goes: The more critical moments you have, the less critical each of those moments really is—until the very end. And this obfuscation in the plot of a match happens most often when the dividend for serving well is diminished. Rallying contests ultimately become pointless, except that someone will win because someone must.

I don't think anyone would argue that a player can reach into a much deeper bag of tricks on a fast court than on a slow one, which is one reason why clay never became the global surface of choice. But at the same time, the typical fast-court match usually produces a more streamlined, simple narrative (it has to be that way, when serving well all but guarantees a hold).

Slow-court tennis is like an automobile race in which every car is fitted with a governor that keeps it from going faster than any of the other vehicles. Someone will still win and everyone else will lose, but I prefer to see what happens when risk is rewarded.

http://m.tennis.com/26278/show/a9d09a201a95204df8c47d9506de47a5&t=uul1f1q55j1taa9gbh2j884ov3
 

sureshs

Bionic Poster
Reading this, you would think that Peter Bozo does not know that Nadal defeated Federer at Wimbledon.
 

Polaris

Hall of Fame
Still. The way Federer has been playing in Dubai (and at other locations for months on end now) is nothing less than eye-popping. On fast hard courts, those most basic talents—quickness, accuracy, reactions, timing—assume an importance they lack on slow courts, especially clay. On fast hard courts, Federer looks like Prometheus Unbound. And that's something that, frankly, I've never taken note of before.

I'm not sure why I haven't picked up on some of this stuff before now; can Dubai's hard courts really be that different? All I know is that above and beyond anything pertinent to his own situation, Federer also gives us an exclusive view of what tennis can be like when played in a certain way on a hard court.

It is a confirmation of Bodo's staggering incompetence as a tennis writer when something that is patently obvious to a recreational tennis player escaped him for so long.

To his credit, he is being honest about his lack of tennis insight, at least this once. I ought to be liking this article: it says just the right things that I agree with. Instead, it depresses me.
 
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mattennis

Hall of Fame
I mean, we are saying this things since many years ago.

Is this the first time he realize what is happening in tennis since at least 10 years ago?
 

fps

Legend
Generally speaking, a high-level match on a fast court between competent servers has two or three key moments per set. On a slow court, a high-level match often has a bewildering number of important moments. But you know how it goes: The more critical moments you have, the less critical each of those moments really is—until the very end. And this obfuscation in the plot of a match happens most often when the dividend for serving well is diminished. Rallying contests ultimately become pointless, except that someone will win because someone must.

http://m.tennis.com/26278/show/a9d09a201a95204df8c47d9506de47a5&t=uul1f1q55j1taa9gbh2j884ov3

This paragraph, specifically the end of it, really summed up how I felt about a lot of the Nadal-Djokovic AO final.
 

Bobby Jr

G.O.A.T.
It is a confirmation of Bodo's staggering incompetence as a tennis writer...

To his credit, he is being honest about his lack of tennis insight, at least this once. I ought to be liking this article: it says just the right things that I agree with. Instead, it depresses me.
This ^ basically. I want to say 'good work' but since it comes from someone with such a history of verbal diarrhoea when it comes to tennis writing it's a little hypocritical to say it just because, for once, he makes some sense.

If Bodo wrote his items more in the style of opinion pieces it'd be easier to view them as that. But he tries to write them more as informational insights when he's often pretty clueless in what says about the finer points of tennis.
 

mandy01

G.O.A.T.
It is a confirmation of Bodo's staggering incompetence as a tennis writer when something that is patently obvious to a recreational tennis player escaped him for so long.

To his credit, he is being honest about his lack of tennis insight, at least this once. I ought to be liking this article: it says just the right things that I agree with. Instead, it depresses me.
This is less about Bodo's insight (which he never had to begin with and which is the case with a good deal of 'professional' tennis writers out there) and more about the fact that when Roger WAS playing at his best or was somewhere closer to his prime, the media, including Bodo himself were busy talking up Nadal and later Djokovic and Murray as "true challengers", messiahs of a "stronger era" etc. This is why, the clear slowing down of surfaces was completely ignored by them. I doubt, Bodo isn't aware of the lament that surrounds the lack of quick surfaces on the tour. It's impossible given the traffic on his site and given the number of press-conferences he's been too where Roger himself has pointed out this fact. But it didn't fit the story at the time which was about these three young Spartans on Roger's tail. The media was absolutely delighted when Roger began his descent in 2008. It was a story that would sell them several papers and garner tons of web-page views. But that story has gotten old and so has Roger who will never go back to what he once was. So there is a desire for a new story along with a slight sense of loss because if there was any sense of being a tennis fan in any of these writers they have now started realizing what they've lost out on. I've seen Roger get a lot of 'love' lately from the likes of Bodo and other Brit/American writers who regularly run tennis-related stuff on the web. A stark contrast to their own stand back in 08/09, I must say.
 

Paul Murphy

Hall of Fame
Yeah, thanks for posting. A good piece - would be nice if tournament directors read it too - no chance of that.
And now we're approaching Indian Well and Miami and a diet of baseline hugging, grinding, slow court tennis awaits.
What a shame.
 

TTMR

Hall of Fame
Yes, Federer has done so well at fast court Dubai that untalented slow court-loving hack Novak Djokovic won it the previous three years in a row.
 

SLD76

G.O.A.T.
Yes, Federer has done so well at fast court Dubai that untalented slow court-loving hack Novak Djokovic won it the previous three years in a row.


I believe dubai played faster this year than in recent years.

but please, dont let that stop your trolling.
 

purge

Hall of Fame
Yeah, thanks for posting. A good piece - would be nice if tournament directors read it too - no chance of that.
And now we're approaching Indian Well and Miami and a diet of baseline hugging, grinding, slow court tennis awaits.
What a shame.
watch michael llodra furiously storm into the miami final with devastating S&V tennis +g+

man that would be so awesome it might even happen lmao
 

abmk

Bionic Poster
This is less about Bodo's insight (which he never had to begin with and which is the case with a good deal of 'professional' tennis writers out there) and more about the fact that when Roger WAS playing at his best or was somewhere closer to his prime, the media, including Bodo himself were busy talking up Nadal and later Djokovic and Murray as "true challengers", messiahs of a "stronger era" etc. This is why, the clear slowing down of surfaces was completely ignored by them. I doubt, Bodo isn't aware of the lament that surrounds the lack of quick surfaces on the tour. It's impossible given the traffic on his site and given the number of press-conferences he's been too where Roger himself has pointed out this fact. But it didn't fit the story at the time which was about these three young Spartans on Roger's tail. The media was absolutely delighted when Roger began his descent in 2008. It was a story that would sell them several papers and garner tons of web-page views. But that story has gotten old and so has Roger who will never go back to what he once was. So there is a desire for a new story along with a slight sense of loss because if there was any sense of being a tennis fan in any of these writers they have now started realizing what they've lost out on. I've seen Roger get a lot of 'love' lately from the likes of Bodo and other Brit/American writers who regularly run tennis-related stuff on the web. A stark contrast to their own stand back in 08/09, I must say.

This ..... basically ...
 

abmk

Bionic Poster
I believe dubai played faster this year than in recent years.

but please, dont let that stop your trolling.

indeed ..... And yes, there is the tiny little matter of federer himself winning dubai five times .....
 
C

celoft

Guest
Fish praises faster surfaces, Dubai hardcourt
Ticker - Tuesday, February 28, 2012



Mardy Fish praises the quick hard-court surface in Dubai. The world No. 8 crushed Andreas Beck in the first round, 6-1, 6-1.

"It's nice to have at least a tournament or two that's a quicker surface on the tour these days," Fish told reporters. "They've slowed everything down. They've slowed Wimbledon down, they've slowed the U.S. Open down. Montreal was the fastest surface of the year last year, Cincinnati is usually relatively quick. A lot of that has to do with the weather as well. But this court is quick. It's playing fast, especially during the day. And it's nice to get that sort of variety a little bit. We've lost the variety, no doubt about it. There are hardly any faster-surface tournaments any more. I love them. There should be a couple more at least."


Jeez........
 
I am not a fan of Bodo's writing. But I must say, he articulated his points and ideas quite well in that article, especially the comparison of surface-to-style and strategy "dynamics" of today and yesterday's game.

But unfortunately also, most fans today practically have little-to-no memory of how the game was played, much less the subtleties involved, even just a little over a decade ago. Or even shorter than that.
 
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