Toni Nadal blasts Djokovic and Team for suicidal tactics against Alcaraz

Could have been the crucial match in the rivalry, we just didn't know it yet at the time.

Another big one for Fed IMO was going down tamely to Guga in straights in FO in 2004, he was the bookies favourite for the tourney and was decimating the tour from the baseline whole year basically. If he had won FO that year he would have been faced with way less pressure facing Nadal later on.
Federer winning the French in 2004 for sure would have taken psychological pressure off on needing to win it, and he would've been defending champion against Nadal the next year, so it would have been interesting how it would have played out, though most would say Nadal would win. But Federer had chances before Nadal became too much and basically wasted them.
 
Could have been the crucial match in the rivalry, we just didn't know it yet at the time.

Another big one for Fed IMO was going down tamely to Guga in straights in FO in 2004, he was the bookies favourite for the tourney and was decimating the tour from the baseline whole year basically. If he had won FO that year he would have been faced with way less pressure facing Nadal later on.

Yes, a win in it would have helped him at the french too that year. The confidence of winning a CYGS that year could have been seen in later years too, Federer's struggles to Nadal outside clay could have been prevented too. Federer every year became worse and worse against Nadal from that point, slowly becoming a pigeon as people were already talking of his lopsided H2H to Nadal and it was on Federer's mind too because this guy was rising on other surfaces too.
 
Toni isn't necessarily wrong but the truth is no tactics were saving Novak on Sunday. Alcaraz cleaned his clock in every aspect of the game, superior in all facets, a total beatdown in every sense of the word. He properly spanked Djokovic and easily as well. It was simply pure dominance, a young gun finishing off a very old man it felt like.
Are you an award winning writer to be coming up with crap like this? Good lord, at least make it subtle that you were whacking your beanpole after the result on Sunday.
 
Are you an award winning writer to be coming up with crap like this? Good lord, at least make it subtle that you were whacking your beanpole after the result on Sunday.
I’m of the “Djokovic will win everything” crowd on here. Many folks were way too overconfident in him coming in and got the deserved humbling.
 
I disagree with Toni. He's right about trying to always play your game, but that wasn't going to work on Sunday, much less with Djoko's age and knee. Being more defensive at his age in this surface, against an opponent that unleashes when given time... He was going to lose anyway, but at least he tried something different, and something different that Carlitos doesn't like, he just did it very poorly.
 
Could have been the crucial match in the rivalry, we just didn't know it yet at the time.

Another big one for Fed IMO was going down tamely to Guga in straights in FO in 2004, he was the bookies favourite for the tourney and was decimating the tour from the baseline whole year basically. If he had won FO that year he would have been faced with way less pressure facing Nadal later on.
CYGS the year immediately after you win your first slam is a big ask.
 
Djokovic is a player who is mediocre in every department. He doesn't really have any strengths - he is Novak of all trades, but master of none. He is not skilled like Sampras to be able to come to the net or have a serve like Ivo Karlovic. So, when he tries a specialized kind of game, he doesn't succeed. He is best when playing solid but not great in all departments.
Novak of all trades. Like that line. Not complete in one area but combining all together he becomes winner.
 
Novak of all trades. Like that line. Not complete in one area but combining all together he becomes winner.
Its an interesting analogy. Bring a so called Jack of all trades does reward consistency and longevity in any career, but there are always specialists at a given time who are better at their trade peak v peak which perhaps the past 12 months has highlighted with the emergence of ATG level Sinceraz.
 
But Novak won the Olympics final essentially playing the kind of aggressive tennis that Toni in the article says was the wrong approach in his straight sets loss to Alcaraz at wimby.

What was Toni's analysis after the Olympics final?
Rafael Nadal's uncle has savaged Novak Djokovic and his team for their ‘suicidal’ tactics against Carlos Alcaraz. The Serbian great was completely outgunned in straight sets by the Spanish star in Sunday’s Wimbledon final.

The 21-year-old became the youngest man in the Open era to win the French Open and Wimbledon back-to-back after defeating Djokovic for the second year in a row at the All England Club. Alcaraz has replaced Nadal as his country’s tennis standard bearer.

Nadal’s uncle, Toni Nadal, played been a key role in the 22-time Grand Slam winner’s success when he served as his nephew’s coach. And he has ripped into Djokovic’s tactics against Alcaraz in a hard-hitting column for El Pais.

Toni said he could empathise with the tough decisions the 37-year-old and his team faced going into the match against a “superior opponent”. He wrote: “Do we face it with our usual weapons and our own style or, on the contrary, do we try to neutralise our opponent by looking for other solutions by moving away from our characteristic game?

Rafael Nadal's uncle has savaged Novak Djokovic and his team for their ‘suicidal’ tactics against Carlos Alcaraz. The Serbian great was completely outgunned in straight sets by the Spanish star in Sunday’s Wimbledon final.

“Personally, I always chose the first. If it is already difficult to play well doing what one is used to doing, it has always seemed much more difficult to me to do well, and even more so in a final, which is not my custom.”

Toni said Djokovic had wrongly gone for the second option and that his declining powers weren’t taken into consideration enough. He added: “Knowing that neither his legs nor the precision of his strokes were what they once were, and that a long and physical match would not help him either, he tried a tactic that ultimately proved suicidal.

“He wanted to impose a high tempo, play aggressively, shorten the exchanges from the back of the court and at the slightest opportunity, close out the points at the net. In my opinion, the only option the Serbian had was to try to slow down the game.”

Toni said that relying on Alcaraz having an off-day and hoping to beat him “by speed is practically impossible nowadays”. He added that only one other player can truly compete with Alcaraz now.

“Perhaps only Jannik Sinner can play the Spaniard on equal terms,” he said. “And, in fact, this Sunday's final confirms that the real rivalry in the next tournaments and, probably, in the next few years will be between these two: the Italian and our great Spanish champion.”


 
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