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Only good thing about clay is Pingu.
I didn't think we had a problem. Heated debates happen on here, no issue.Hey Jono, can't we be friends or at least friendly? I don't want our exchange degenerate to antagonism. First up I'll correct the record. I didn't say Nadal's hth v Fed is lucky. You said I did and that's the distinction and its not appreciated.
So if you want to take issue with anything I've said you can use the following instead. Its true I don't rate clay. My opinion is influenced by the no. of champions there who didn't win (much if at all) anywhere else. So I came to think of RG as the no name slam. Whereas the other surfaces reflected quality any kind of journey man could win on clay. So I never held it against the likes of Sampras failing there. At Garros everyone was a potential Sampras or Agassi. Alternatively those 2 fell to the level of the journeymen.
It may appear a contradiction but while I don't rate French open winners the exception is Nadal. The reason being that since everyone is a potential winner at Garros imo, then Nadal's consistency there is meritorious. I also rate Fed on account of his consistency there and second only to his frequent conqueror.
If you think I'm running down Nadal then you have misread what I've said. I'm neither a die hard for one or the other. I just rate Fed higher as I think he's better over all surfaces, Nadal's dominance on clay notwithstanding. It is on the record that the discrepancy in the HTH can be explained on the bias towards clay in their contests. That is why I don't rate the HTH as definitive in separating the 2. It is a reasonable conclusion whether you agree with it or not but it isn't fair to say it is uninformed if you don't agree.
Hewitt often complained about the surface at the Oz. The point being that European players didn't want to make the trip if they had no chance of advancing into the tournament. Want to attract the strongest field? Then make them a surface the majority of them like.Europe aren't telling Tennis Australia or the US Open to slow down hard courts.
The fastest hard court in the world is in Paris.
Carlos Moya was a genius on carpet in Virtua Tennis, had to knock off the guy wearing pants to clock the game.Tennis won't be a proper sport until they have a Persian Open as a grand slam which is played on carpet.
is this actually a thing?Unless Nadal wins Wimbledon a few more times and destroys some more serve & volley players at wimbledon or the indoor hard courts, he won't go down as the GOAT.
Being a GOAT is not just about records, especially in a sport like Tennis where the records are a lot more about who you play against as well as how good you are yourself.
Nadal could have more GS than Federer, I still won't consider him GOAT worthy and infact, will rate him behind Federer, Borg & Sampras because I don't think Nadal has the game to challenge bonafide big-serving serve and volley players on the faster courts of pre-2000s with smaller tennis balls than today's.
It is what it is. The two huge facts that differentiate tennis of 2000s from tennis of all earlier periods is: a) Wimbledon replaced their grass, which slowed the courts down from 2002 all the way through to 2006. Wimbledon is significantly slower today than it was in the past. Same goes with the OZ and US opens.Classic argument of "player would not have succeeded in previous era despite the fact he didn't play in the previous era and therefore never had to adapt his game - but I'll hold it against him anyway."
Oh this makes me happy. Genuine fist pump moment.It is the same way i apply the argument to cricket. The likes of Hammond, Hutton, Hobbs, Sutcliffe, etc..
The implications of this logic are pretty spectacular. As it stands, Federer is a great. But if, fifty years after Federer's retirement, tennis changes in a way that would have made Federer's game much less effective, he goes back to being not-a-great. To remain a great he would have to have anticipated these changes 50 years in advance, and developed a game that could deal with them.It is what it is. The two huge facts that differentiate tennis of 2000s from tennis of all earlier periods is: a) Wimbledon replaced their grass, which slowed the courts down from 2002 all the way through to 2006. Wimbledon is significantly slower today than it was in the past. Same goes with the OZ and US opens.
Tennis is played with bigger balls of same mass than it was- i think this change came around in 2008, which obviously favours the slower players ( a smaller ball of same mass travells faster than a bigger ball of same mass).
I do not believe in the magic of adaptability argument. Adaptation is not a garantee, or a benifit of the doubt, adaptation is a shot in the dark. Some adapt, some don't. Just because you were great at doing ABC, doesnt mean you'd be equally good at adapting to doing XYZ.
Nadal does not have the game to challenge the top serve & volleyers of the yesteryears on the faster surfaces. That is a fact. Could he have adapted ? maybe, maybe not. We shall never know. As is, he does not have the game to win against the likes of Becker/Sampras of the 90s. Federer does. he wouldn't steamroll them but he'd win consistently enough against them to be a factor in the non-clay majors in any era.
It is the same way i apply the argument to cricket. The likes of Hammond, Hutton, Hobbs, Sutcliffe, etc. never actually faced 90mph bowlers intent on beheading them, like the way Gavaskar, Boycott,Gooch, Greenidge, etc. did. Would Hammond/Hobbs/Sutcliffe adjusted to facing 90mph men bowling bouncers all day long to their heads ? Maybe, maybe not.But as is, they made hay against spinners and fast/fast-medium bowlers bowling to the stumps or outside the stumps but not intent on bowling to the batsmen's heads. So they do not qualify, in my opinion, to be considered greats of the game. As is, their game was lacking, so is Nadal's. Adjustement across the eras is just a speculation. Its not a sure-shot.
As is, ie, what their games stood empirically as, is what deserves to be compared.