SirBloody Idiot
Cricketer Of The Year
Sunday, July 5, I
WIMBLEDON 2009: Men's Final PREVIEW
With the men's singles final decided, let's see how the competitors in tomorrow's final stack up.
Radek Špidla (Czech Republic)
Ranking: 5 (peak of 2, 5/4)
Born: Zlín, Czech Republic
D.O.B.: 1 February, 1984 (age 25)
Height: 1.94 m (6 ft 4 in)
Best Performances:W: Queen's (d Hall); F: Australian Open (Hall); Sydney (Carter); SF: Miami (Daneu); Belgrade (Brdar); QF: Rotterdam (Champion); Dubai (Champion); Indian Wells (Daneu).
Darcy Cowan (United States)
Ranking: 6 (peak of 3, 23/2)
Born: Green River, Wyoming, United States
D.O.B.: 14 April, 1990 (age 19)
Height: 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Best Performances: F: Memphis (Read); SF: Australian Open (Špidla); San Jose (Boyd); Miami (Hall); Queen's (Hall); QF: Auckland (Hainisch); Estoril (Matias); Madrid (Blanco).
Previous Meetings: 1 (Špidla 1, Cowan 0)
(5) Radek Špidla CZE vs.(1) Jason Hall USA (6) Darcy Cowan USA. No one was more surprised to see Cowan go through the semifinals than Jason Hall himself who looked utterly bewildered at times with how well the teenager had played. Is he really the next big thing? If he didn't already prove it at the Australian Open, he's proved it here with some awesome tennis. That being said, I think Špidla is in the best form out of any one in the tournament; he was clinical at Queen's, and was only really troubled for the first time in the semis against Zoltan Varga. Remember, if it weren't for Danijel Micic's total brain explosion in the third round, we might've been given the Hall-Špidla match every one desired.
Špidla struggled against Varga in on Friday because the Hungarian played aggressive tennis. Against the big man - particularly on grass - you can't just put the ball back in play otherwise he'll eat you alive. As highly as I rate Dwayne Murdoch, he did it in the quarters and was embarrassed because of it. That plays into the hands of Cowan who showed his aggressive streak against the world number two on Friday. If he can get off to a big start - unlike at the Aussie Open back in February - it will go a long way to making him the first Grand Slam champion under the age of twenty.
As far as rankings are concerned, the result of the match does not matter; Špidla leapfrogs Radivoj Daneu and Sven Oxenstierna to move back into third spot, whilst Cowan ousts the Ox from the top five to settle into fifth. But there's more than rankings points on the line; Špidla doesn't want to go 0-2 in Grand Slam finals, and Cowan wants to do what he couldn't do in Memphis against Brett Read and go on to win his first ATP International Series title. I've betted against him twice in a row, and I am not going to make that same mistake again no matter how good Špidla has looked this month. PREDICTION: Cowan in 4 sets.
WIMBLEDON 2009: Men's Final PREVIEW
With the men's singles final decided, let's see how the competitors in tomorrow's final stack up.
Radek Špidla (Czech Republic)
Ranking: 5 (peak of 2, 5/4)
Born: Zlín, Czech Republic
D.O.B.: 1 February, 1984 (age 25)
Height: 1.94 m (6 ft 4 in)
Best Performances:W: Queen's (d Hall); F: Australian Open (Hall); Sydney (Carter); SF: Miami (Daneu); Belgrade (Brdar); QF: Rotterdam (Champion); Dubai (Champion); Indian Wells (Daneu).
Darcy Cowan (United States)
Ranking: 6 (peak of 3, 23/2)
Born: Green River, Wyoming, United States
D.O.B.: 14 April, 1990 (age 19)
Height: 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Best Performances: F: Memphis (Read); SF: Australian Open (Špidla); San Jose (Boyd); Miami (Hall); Queen's (Hall); QF: Auckland (Hainisch); Estoril (Matias); Madrid (Blanco).
Previous Meetings: 1 (Špidla 1, Cowan 0)
- Australian Open - Men's Singles, 1st Semifinal, R Špidla def. D Cowan, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5
Cowan had come off a tough run to the semifinals which included five-set affairs with David Champion and Radivoj Daneu, and a typically taxing fourth round clash with fourth seed Daniel Páez Blanco. Meanwhile, sixth seed Špidla had dropped just three sets throughout the tournament and looked too fresh for the eighteen year old who was made to struggle against a man in rampant form. Špidla was too good on service for Cowan and served an almost perfect match in a confident victory against the American gun.
Odds: Špidla $1.81, Cowan $2.00.
(5) Radek Špidla CZE vs.
Špidla struggled against Varga in on Friday because the Hungarian played aggressive tennis. Against the big man - particularly on grass - you can't just put the ball back in play otherwise he'll eat you alive. As highly as I rate Dwayne Murdoch, he did it in the quarters and was embarrassed because of it. That plays into the hands of Cowan who showed his aggressive streak against the world number two on Friday. If he can get off to a big start - unlike at the Aussie Open back in February - it will go a long way to making him the first Grand Slam champion under the age of twenty.
As far as rankings are concerned, the result of the match does not matter; Špidla leapfrogs Radivoj Daneu and Sven Oxenstierna to move back into third spot, whilst Cowan ousts the Ox from the top five to settle into fifth. But there's more than rankings points on the line; Špidla doesn't want to go 0-2 in Grand Slam finals, and Cowan wants to do what he couldn't do in Memphis against Brett Read and go on to win his first ATP International Series title. I've betted against him twice in a row, and I am not going to make that same mistake again no matter how good Špidla has looked this month. PREDICTION: Cowan in 4 sets.