Next dominant players will amass 20+ under current homogenous surface conditions and current tour system.
Unless Djokovic (or Nadal,no?) wins 25+, slam record won't last long.
His 7+(6.5?) YE#1 will last longer.
They have to win one first...or do you have Cilic with 25 at 45?
There is no evidence, outside of the Big3, of any “homogenization“.
Tsitsi, Med, Zev all have strengths in different surfaces
90% of analysis at TTW makes the same mistake, not understanding how unique the Big 3 are.
There is no evidence, outside of the Big3, of any “homogenization“.
Tsitsi, Med, Zev all have strengths in different surfaces
90% of analysis at TTW makes the same mistake, not understanding how unique the Big 3 are.
Surface homogenization is BS. It’s more like playstyle homogenization.
Surface homogenization is BS. It’s more like playstyle homogenization.
That’s undeniable yes but there is still a massive difference between grass, clay, and HC. People act like it’s all the same surface.It is a fact that grass and hard courts are altered to slower since late 90s.
@Nuclear WarheadI think a guy like Sinner maybe?
That’s undeniable yes but there is still a massive difference between grass, clay, and HC. People act like it’s all the same surface.
Plus if they’ve both slowed down, then why wasn’t the 90s “homogenous” as well with fast grass and fast HC?
There is no evidence, outside of the Big3, of any “homogenization“.
Tsitsi, Med, Zev all have strengths in different surfaces
90% of analysis at TTW makes the same mistake, not understanding how unique the Big 3 are.
90% of analysis at TTW makes the same mistake, not understanding how unique the Big 3 are.
Yea I can see Sinner marauding a Roland Garros title in a desolate draw with injured Tsitsipas and Zverev. This is bound to happen. The only big titles he will win will be scavenged. Hyena gen.
OK, now we’re getting somewhere. There’s a homogenization of racket technology, more favorable draws, and increasingly a generation of players raised in academies that don’t teach S&V. Also a huge dearth of non-European players — America, Australia, and South America are all looking at their worst generation of players ever. Additionally recovery methods are better meaning players are more able to compete year-round than ever before (don’t discount the health element)You are offended by the word "homogeneous"?
Of course there are still quite a difference.
But much less. And it's bounciness? too.
Also current ranking and tournament system favors a few top players.
OK, now we’re getting somewhere. There’s a homogenization of racket technology, more favorable draws, and increasingly a generation of players raised in academies that don’t teach S&V. Also a huge dearth of non-European players — America, Australia, and South America are all looking at their worst generation of players ever. Additionally recovery methods are better meaning players are more able to compete year-round than ever before (don’t discount the health element)
What I think is NOT that large of a factor is “surface homogenization”
the reason I hate this phrase is that I’ve actually played on clay and HC before. To say they play the same or even similarly is ridiculous and makes a mockery of what the game actually is.
Yes, the tour will want someone to break the record as records seem to be a big thing for fans.
But it won't happen for a looooong time.
I'm just guessing a dominant player in next Era or generation.
As early 10 years, 2030 or so, someone will be nearing 20 slams, I'm predicting.
I don't think top 3 guys in next Era will be this close level.
OP is deeply wrong. For many years, a player comparable in quality to Big 3 will not appear. Big 3 caliber talent is very rare, in the Open era before Big 3 only Borg and Sampras had it.
Definitely agree, and I hope you understand my overarching point now - the surfaces have all slowed which does make them more “homogenous” in that sense but it’s far from the only factor. players like Kuerten and Muster still did well on those lightning fast courts in the 90s. Kuerten especially showed the value of poly strings when he won the YE #1.I don't know what's the biggest factor.
The polyester arrived similar time.
The ball also gotten heavier and much more regulated tour wide. up until 90s, the variances in balls each tournament was higher.
The ranking system switched from best of 9 to 13 and atp removed bonus points for beating top 10 players.
Slams also increased number of seeds from 16 to 32.
I still think surface, balls and string affected the most.
It's very different sport now, maybe excep clay.
Definitely agree, and I hope you understand my overarching point now - the surfaces have all slowed which does make them more “homogenous” in that sense but it’s far from the only factor. players like Kuerten and Muster still did well on those lightning fast courts in the 90s. Kuerten especially showed the value of poly strings when he won the YE #1.
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I think a guy like Sinner maybe?
The 90’s also had slow HC (Indian Wells, Miami, and even the AO wasn’t that fast) and the entire clay season in addition to fast hard courts and grass.That’s undeniable yes but there is still a massive difference between grass, clay, and HC. People act like it’s all the same surface.
Plus if they’ve both slowed down, then why wasn’t the 90s “homogenous” as well with fast grass and fast HC?
I would simplify it by saying homogenous means the speeds range is reduced.the surfaces have all slowed which does make them more “homogenous”
Is Canada that fast these days? I never got that impression. Always thought it was more of a medium-paced hard court.I would simplify it by saying homogenous means the speeds range is reduced.
Slower doesn't make it more homogenous if it's an across the board speed downshifting.
Peak homogenity was probably reached in 2018-2019, when AO, USO, Canada, Wimbledon and YEC were all medium-paced.
The current trend is to make everything fast again, as the majority of big HC tournaments are medium fast right now, all except IW/Miami and Paris Masters.
I would simplify it by saying homogenous means the speeds range is reduced.
Slower doesn't make it more homogenous if it's an across the board speed downshifting.
Peak homogenity was probably reached in 2018-2019, when AO, USO, Canada, Wimbledon and YEC were all medium-paced.
The current trend is to make everything fast again, as the majority of big HC tournaments are medium fast right now, all except IW/Miami and Paris Masters.
Yeah that’s true. I was making a specious argument on purpose to illustrate that “speed” is far from the only factor to worry about on different surfaces. Bounce and movement differences with sliding favor certain shots: I.e. drop shots on clay, slices and volleys on grass, etc.The 90’s also had slow HC (Indian Wells, Miami, and even the AO wasn’t that fast) and the entire clay season in addition to fast hard courts and grass.
Sinner won't win any slams.I think a guy like Sinner maybe?
Had you said any other player I would have probably scoffed, admittedly. However, I really do have good things to say about young Sinner. If I could just get the ear of his team (or Korda's, or Auger-Aliassime's) I could showcase the results of my patented armchair analysis that would have them winning M100s in mere weeks.....
Anyways, I agree Sinner's ceiling is high. Will he go higher is the question? I'd like to see him start mixing with the little 4 more often. He already has a few wins over each of them. Dai su, forza!
Ferrer, Berdych, Tsonga, and the likes were consistent on every surface too.There is no evidence, outside of the Big3, of any “homogenization“.
Tsitsi, Med, Zev all have strengths in different surfaces
90% of analysis at TTW makes the same mistake, not understanding how unique the Big 3 are.
Sinner won't win any slams.
Sinner won’t win more than 10. I give him around 3-5.I think a guy like Sinner maybe?
Ferrer, Berdych, Tsonga, and the likes were consistent on every surface too.
We'll see.
Everyone thought Sampras' record was untouchable and yet 15 years after he retired, not 1, not 2 but 3 players erased most of his records from the tennis books.
Now we feel the same about the new records. The bar is higher and there are some records that seem realistically untouchable. Nadal's 13 RG and his 80+ consecutive wins on clay... Federer's 237 consecutive weeks and his number of consecutive Semifinals in and finals in slams. Djokovic winning every Masters and slams twice, his 17,000 ATP points... possibly winning the 4 slams in a row twice. Never say never, but these records will be tough to beat.
On the other hand, imagine the career Federer, Nadal or Djokovic would have if the other 2 didn't exist. They would have 30-35 slams, 50-60 Masters and 600-700 weeks at #1.
If ONE player can come close to Djokovic's level but doesn't have 2 other goats to stop him, yes. 20 slams doesn't seem far-fetched.
The record of Masters (currently 36, Djokovic will probably win around 40 in the end) could come down even faster.
None of the CURRENT active players are going to win 21 slams though.
Medvedev will be 26, still has ZERO and he isn't winning RG or Wimbledon anytime soon.
Thiem can win maybe 2 or 3 more be with all the injures it doesn't look good for him.
Tsitsipas isn't winning Wimbledon and Medvedev/Zverev/Djokovic are all superior on hard courts. RG is his best shot for now.
Zverev is more multi surface but isn't it already too late for him? Will turn 25 and still has ZERO. Still fragile mentally in BO5.
Plus no one knows how long these 4 will peak. Will they be as good as Fedederer/Nadal/Djokovic when they're 35? Chances are higher they'll be done winning slams at 30-31...
The other guys aren't in the running for even one slam, for now.
The new trio (Medvedev, Zverev Tsitsipas) will rack up most slams for a while, but it's not like they have 20 years ahread of them. I think one of these 3 could win maybe 8-10 slams but no more.
When you see a new guy beating top players, multisurface and winning his 1st slams at 18-19, maybe the slam record will be in danger. The only current active player under 20 who MAY win a slam is maybe Alcaraz in RG, but his serve is so poor he'll never perform on fast surfaces. No one else in the horizon.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/0/d/1artEsVLOOjwSEafl4RfMnLhfEUnsQKa7aQNIyaPVnLI/htmlview#Is Canada that fast these days? I never got that impression. Always thought it was more of a medium-paced hard court.
Ferrer on grass? Berdych on clay? Are we talking the same players?
The 90’s also had slow HC (Indian Wells, Miami, and even the AO wasn’t that fast) and the entire clay season in addition to fast hard courts and grass.
David Ferrer reached 10 consecutive slam quarter finals, (last time I checked. So aybe more non consecutive)
Ferrer was still making Wimbledon QFs. Berdych did fairly well on clay too.Ferrer on grass? Berdych on clay? Are we talking the same players?
Ferrer was still making Wimbledon QFs. Berdych did fairly well on clay too.
Ferrer was still making Wimbledon QFs. Berdych did fairly well on clay too.
If Sampras had Ferrer-tier results on other surfaces, that would be fairly consistent. Of course, Pete was just in a different league.Sampras had more success at RG, than Ferrer had at Wimbledon. And no one is calling Sampras a consistent performer on clay.
Berdych did reach a semifinal at RG and a couple of quarters, but he also had 6 first round losses.