Was Rafael Nadal Suffering From Hubris?

7 hours ago | Updated 6 hours ago

Francis Levy
Writer


What happened to Rafael Nadal, in his loss to Fabio Fognini in the third round of the US Open is what everyone is afraid of: falling from a great height. It, in fact conforms to Aristotle's definition of tragedy which is the fall of a man of high position. In modern life we have revised the Aristotelian view to conform to the tragedies and indignities of everyday existence in which lives are cut short by unforeseen events like diseases and accidents. But the loss following a 2-love lead exemplify the notion of hamaria or tragic flaw, one of whose most common elements is hubris or excessive pride. Did Nadal underestimate his opponent once he took the lead (though he'd already had losses to a player, he'd once easily dispatched, earlier in the year)? Was the rest of the match a working out in microcosm of what happens when a champion thinks he has it in the bag with a big lead or reputation and then comes a cropper? That's what happened in the famous fight in which Buster Douglas knocked out Mike Tyson in Tokyo. Nadal told the Guardian, ("Rafael Nadal's biggest loss is the aura of invincibility that has defined him," 9/5/14),


"The sport to me is very simple, no? If you are playing with less confidence and you are hitting balls without creating the damage to the opponent that I believe I should do, then they have the possibility of attack."

When you think about it, classic tragedy has it right. Too much success goes to your head. Whether Tiger Woods' philandering was ignited by his success or vice versa, success creates a feeling of impregnability, what analysts term narcissistic megalomania. When you are one of the titans it's easy to throw caution to the wind whether in the match or in the behavior surrounding it. And once a champion begins his or her fall, it's a long and often Sisyphean road back to the top.

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/8104110
 

MichaelNadal

Bionic Poster
Nadal is suffering from it being close to 2016 and him playing a demanding style of tennis ever since he looked like this:

53016432.jpeg



Hell, I'd be finnish too.
 

zagor

Bionic Poster
Nadal is suffering from it being close to 2016 and him playing a demanding style of tennis ever since he looked like this:

53016432.jpeg



Hell, I'd be finnish too.

Too simple of an answer man, can't do that. Have to go through mental gymnastics and come up with a dozen of theories ranging from biopassport to Nadal suddenly letting his success go to his head (after 10 years of winning slams in a row) or the tour being composed of retards that only now finally figured out they should attack his short balls (it only took a decade for pro coaches/players to come up with that genious gameplan, grossly overpaid if you ask me). Of course, not to forget the Astrology too.
 

MichaelNadal

Bionic Poster
Too simple of an answer man, can't do that. Have to go through mental gymnastics and come up with a dozen of theories ranging from biopassport to Nadal suddenly letting his success go to his head (after 10 years of winning slams in a row) or the tour being composed of retards that only now finally figured out they should attack his short balls (it only took a decade for pro coaches/players to come up with that genious gameplan, grossly overpaid if you ask me). Of course, not to forget the Astrology too.

Lol pretty much. What's happening to Rafa is pretty much expected. Of course as a fan I'd like to see him try to do something to combat his decline but it doesn't seem like he cares to.
 
Too simple of an answer man, can't do that. Have to go through mental gymnastics and come up with a dozen of theories ranging from biopassport to Nadal suddenly letting his success go to his head (after 10 years of winning slams in a row) or the tour being composed of retards that only now finally figured out they should attack his short balls (it only took a decade for pro coaches/players to come up with that genious gameplan, grossly overpaid if you ask me). Of course, not to forget the Astrology too.

Tsonga attacked Nadal's short balls in AO 2008. So did Delpo and Soderling in USO & RG 2009. Those guys played with absolutely no fear.

Fed also attacked Nadal's short balls in Wimbledon & Shanghai 2006, Hamburg 2007 and WTF 2010.
 
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Polaris

Hall of Fame
Francis Levy is so stunningly, idiotically, far off the mark that it is laughable. The words "Nadal" and "hubris" don't belong in the same sentence. Nadal has flaws, but overconfidence and a superiority complex are not in that list. Clearly, reading Aristotle does not seem to have resulted in much wisdom.
 
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DMTNA

Rookie
Lol pretty much. What's happening to Rafa is pretty much expected. Of course as a fan I'd like to see him try to do something to combat his decline but it doesn't seem like he cares to.
I 'm pretty sure that he does but in a wrong way, of course. He is trying to change that returning of serve and his serve as well.
But with that horrible forehand now, he can't achieve anything.
I hope that he considers changing back to that "new" racquet in Monte Carlo 2015. In spite of losing to Djokovic, he actually did perform pretty well.
 

Jaitock1991

Hall of Fame
He's possibly the best frontrunner in the history of the game. Which in essence means he knows better than most how to close out and win tennis matches. Confidence is definitely a huge issue for him, and it might come from a slight(but huge on this level) physical decline. The one gameplan that he could always fall back on is gone; he can no longer out-grind his opponents on a daily basis.
 

moonballs

Hall of Fame
Too simple of an answer man, can't do that. Have to go through mental gymnastics and come up with a dozen of theories ranging from biopassport to Nadal suddenly letting his success go to his head (after 10 years of winning slams in a row) or the tour being composed of retards that only now finally figured out they should attack his short balls (it only took a decade for pro coaches/players to come up with that genious gameplan, grossly overpaid if you ask me). Of course, not to forget the Astrology too.
After he just lost a five setter to no other than Fognini how can you still dismiss his loss of stamina might be related to the bio passport? Nobody will say Fog is a good grinder.
 
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