some of these players had a bad attitude, skipnewcombe with the telling conclusion that a "good attitude" is a requirement of a wimbledon champion
It's a fitting name as it's for all the losers who couldn't get into centre court for the final.Lol at Barker calling it "Henman Hill".
Stay classy Sue.
Invers is that you?It's a fitting name as it's for all the losers who couldn't get into centre court for the final.
What a transformation he's made in the last 2 years. He'd have disintegrated from 4-1 down 2 years ago.
Bet he's gutted Lisicki didn't win as he has to share the opening dance with Bartoli at the after party.
Indeed. Always gracious in defeat, something the likes of Federer could learn.Nah bull**** Djokovic is class.
Men prefer beautiful championsBet he's gutted Lisicki didn't win as he has to share the opening dance with Bartoli at the after party.
I remember your reaction when Roger cried at the 2009 Aus Open after losing despite you being a Roger man. You weren't impressed. Murray has joined him with waterworks post-loss (multiple times). No crying for Djokovic in any of his grand slam losses.Almost as pleased Djokovic lost too. Hard man to warm to.
I agree with a lot of what you say here, but how come you only ever concentrate on Murray not playing well? Whenever Murray loses you put it down to his passiveness, but how about the fact that Djokovic was hitting way more UEs than he usually does, and his shot selection was piss poor.The second set from 4-1 down was the key passage of play I think. Murray actually showed some aggression, mixed it up a little bit - came to the net occasionally, went after the serve and tried for return winners, did it enough to surprise Djokovic and break the monotony. It also put the pressure on and possibly resulted in the double fault at break point. Why Murray doesn't do that sort of thing generally I don't know. He has it in him to dominate Wimbledon for 3-4 years.
He easily could have cried at the French final in 2012. Perhaps even more so the semi against Rafa in 2013, that would have been gut wrenching to lose after a break up against Rafa in the 5th - he would have made history. Both times denied the chance for a career grand slam.What reason would Djokovic have to cry? It's not like he's never won a major before, he's not going to lose his number one ranking or fail to make a piece of history. I don't see the comparison with what either Federer or Murray were going through or Roddick for that matter when he lost in '09. Besides, he said he was tired from the semi. All players give their feelings on why they didn't play well. They're asked to do it and in a sport like tennis where you're out there alone the losses are harder. Djokovic is much more likeable than the player of a few years ago who'd jaw with the crowd. He's matured a lot. But there was no reason for him to cry.
It was a great effort on debutGreat result for Murray and well deserved. The change in his mentality since Lendl started coaching him is amazing.
murray is magic like starsIt was a great effort on debut
I thought he did pretty well yesterday. His honest answer would have been to wonder out loud how he managed so many unforced errors, but he had the grace to simply praise Murray's performance. Obviously a smart move in the circumstances, but still a gracious response.I remember your reaction when Roger cried at the 2009 Aus Open after losing despite you being a Roger man. You weren't impressed. Murray has joined him with waterworks post-loss (multiple times). No crying for Djokovic in any of his grand slam losses.
Add that with not making excuses for losses, and he's the best of the bunch. He let Murray have his moment, and didn't steal any of the spotlight.
I actually didn't have any issue with Murray last year (emotions are emotions, what can you do?) but I think Novak handles losses better than any of the big 4.