Murray in the 2015 Aus Open too. He went to absolute water when Novak started limping and looked like he couldn't move. Went from a break up in the third and official favourite to losing 10 straight games or some ****.Federer himself had the chance to put a big dent in his hopes at Wimbledon 2014 and 2015, and US Open 2015, but it wasn't to be. Now I can't see anyone stopping him, and it'd be fully deserved. I thought Sampras was unlucky his record only lasted 7 years, looks like Federer's won't last even that long Insane.
These guys are just better - play most if not all the clay tournaments which Sampras and Agassi weren't doing. They practice more and care more. The best are the best on every surface, great for tennis.Really impressive the improvement Murray has shown on clay in the last couple of years, as well as Djokovic on grass. After the '90s era of surface specialists, it's quite a revelation how the great players these days are uniformly good everywhere. Or are the surfaces more homogenized these days?
The courts are undoubtedly more homogenised in modern times but there's no doubt that Murray has stepped up his clay game in the last year or two. I've liked what I've seen from him recently and he's definitely a live chance in Paris.Really impressive the improvement Murray has shown on clay in the last couple of years, as well as Djokovic on grass. After the '90s era of surface specialists, it's quite a revelation how the great players these days are uniformly good everywhere. Or are the surfaces more homogenized these days?
the surfaces are definitely more homogenized these days, no doubt about it but it's not like every tom, dick and harry is playing well on all surfaces...this is also about a set of brilliant all-court players, the likes of which we have never before seen in the open era, i am referring to fed, rafa, novak and to a lesser extent murray...Really impressive the improvement Murray has shown on clay in the last couple of years, as well as Djokovic on grass. After the '90s era of surface specialists, it's quite a revelation how the great players these days are uniformly good everywhere. Or are the surfaces more homogenized these days?
Yep. He's declined on hard courts IMO but clay has turned from Murray's worst surface to probably his best.Murray hadn't won a clay court tournament before 2015 right? What a turnaround Now he's won Madrid (last year) and Rome (this year), and beaten Rafa (last year and this year) and Novak (this year). Not to mention pushed Novak to 5 at last year's French Open.