Originally posted by stroke
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Monte Carlo, ATP 1000
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View PostSinner pulled it out. Always tough to move from hard courts to clay, but he survived a good test.
From ATP: The seventh-seeded Italian trailed Hurkacz by a set and a break at 3-6, 1-2 but rallied to a 3-6, 7-6(6), 6-1 triumph at the clay-court ATP Masters 1000 event. Even after recovering his early deficit in the second set, Sinner was on the brink of defeat when trailing 5/6 in the second-set tie-break. Yet he reeled off three points in a row to save the match point and clinch the second set before dominating the decider on Court Rainier III.
Zverev's fastest serve was 869 MPH or 1,400 Km/h. But did he have good technique?
https://www.atptour.com/en/scores/cu...lo/410/results
I'd hate to get hit with that !
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View Post
Can't resist sharing this screen cap. For those of you suspicious of ATP stats, here's some fodder:
Zverev's fastest serve was 869 MPH or 1,400 Km/h. But did he have good technique?
https://www.atptour.com/en/scores/cu...lo/410/results
I'd hate to get hit with that !
Daniil Medvedev and Alexander Zverev exchanged a less than friendly handshake at the net after their third-round encounter at the Monte-Carlo Masters.
Serving out a set or serving out a match can be an adventure if you are not secure with your motion. I was watching just a tad of this...Zverev was going to serve it out at 5-4. To tell you the truth I was too bored and just went to sleep...10ish PM here in Sweden. Need my beauty rests after my haircut yesterday. But this may just sort of prove a point that I have been making for many years on this forum. Roger was the best at serving out...and there were times he had issues. The first serve just deserts you when you need it most. Well...you gotta make due.
It's great you love your statistics and the rest do too. In the land of the blind the one eyed man is King. I have two.
don_budge
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Originally posted by don_budge View PostNovak Djokovic versus Lorenzo Musetti...everyone looking for Musetti to duplicate the effort at the French when he had Novak two sets to zero...before folding. Probably not going to happen.
Hubert Hurkacz versus Jannik Sinner...see my comments earlier in this thread about a big lug hugging the baseline against more mobil opponents.
Daniil Medvedev versus Alexander Zverev...maybe the most interesting match story wise on the agenda. Medvedev up 7-6 Head to Head and this is their first meeting on clay. Medvedev in form and Zverev is always somewhat of a question mark.
Matteo Berrettini versus Holger Rune...Berrettini's service motion under the microscope and Rune's dysfunctional tennis coach the story here.
Andrey Rublev versus Karen Khachanov...two leading tennis players in the modern game currently without a flag which cannot be discussed on tennisplayer.net due to gag order on politics.
Jan-Lennard Struff versus Casper Ruud...Ruud trying to make a believer of himself and Struff trying to make a believer of just about anybody. Good win over Minaur who might be clay challenged.
Taylor Fritz versus Jiri Lehecka...Just want to make a brief comment/analysis about the fashion statement of Fritz against Wawrinka. Nice off white shirt and shorts. The headband is a wise choice over the backwards baseball cap eight days a week. But why the black socks? Just curious...such a poor choice.
Nicolas Jarry versus Stefanos Tsitsipas...my "MATCH OF THE DAY" because of a two fold criteria. First of all is the conversation of service motions and secondly is the question surrounding the coaching paradigm behind the development of Stefanos Tsitisipas. What is the path forwards for Stefanos? Is there a vision? Once a boatload of potential now a anchor of under developed potental. Why?don_budge
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View PostCan't resist sharing this screen cap. For those of you suspicious of ATP stats, here's some fodder:
Zverev's fastest serve was 869 MPH or 1,400 Km/h. But did he have good technique?
https://www.atptour.com/en/scores/cu...lo/410/results
I'd hate to get hit with that !
Did Zverev have good technique? Again...this is a question of potential. What potential is there left in this big time athlete who at 6'6" should have a boatload of serving prowess that will not fail him when it matters most? That is the question.
Performance is another thing. As a self described "Performance Analyst" it is part of my function to observe what can potentially go wrong. Thus the discussion of service motion technique and the quest for the perfect motion. With regards to performance...all of these players and athletes are performers. In any given match they perform to a percentage of their ability at any given moment. There are a plethora of reasons and excuses that enhance performance or detract from it. The question is always why. The players arrive at their conclusions as to what makes them perform their best through an accumulation of experience and having been through the ringer before. But they are human and are not always capable of arriving at the lowest common denominator as it relates to their optimum performance.
"The Big Four" and more notably "The Big Three" sans Andy Murray have been big time performers for that past umpteen years. It would seem that on any given night that these guys were capable of approaching their limit in terms of optimal performance. Sometimes they were not capable of even approaching that limit yet with all of their experience and training they were somehow capable of delivering the goods. Under all conditions and circumstances. Let's face it...they have their excuses too. They are human too. But somehow God makes some of us just a cut above the rest and these were the chose few. Performance. The bottom line.
So technique is not the end all and be all. It is not the end itself. It is the means to the end. Better technique is going to enhance your percentage of performance by giving a player more repeatable strokes and shots under any and all circumstances and conditions. But in the end it isn't going to win stand alone for you. Performance is the end.
I think that the Musetti and Djokovic match was a good case in point. Djokovic was obviously not fully invested in the match...probably for a number of reasons. First of all...what's in it for him? Nothing of great importance. Certainly not. He had been out of action for a number of weeks and depending how he invested his time between training, his family and any other number of factors more or less dictated something to the effect of his performance. But the biggest underlying factor is one of desire. What did he want out of this tournament? Was it important that he won it? Was it even important that he even won a match? I doubt it. This is all about preparation. Preparation for the French Open. I suspect somewhere between here and the French Open we will see the "real" Novak Djokovic.
Btw...for what little I saw of Musetti I thought he had a pretty darn good motion. On the serve. I have never been a big fan of the Zverev motion. I know he can generate big time MPH...but that is merely a third of the entire proposition. His motion looks like it has been cobbled together over the years...and again from what little I saw yesterday it looked to me as if it had been modified a bit. I guess I will have to wait and see to look at it again...seeing as Mr. Pencil sent him packing. After he failed to perform when he needed it most. For whatever reason.
don_budge
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Originally posted by stroke View PostRune a slight favorite over Medvedev. Tsitsipas is a solid favorite over Fritz. Fritz looks primed for an upset here it looks to me.
Taylor Fritz primed to upset Stefanos Tsitsipas? Number three ranked player in the world versus number ten. Tsitsipas was more than likely more or less raised on red clay in Europe. Most Americans are a bit like fish out of water on the surface. Stefanos has not really progressed like I thought that he would. I was curious to how good a player his father Apostopolis or whatever it is...is or was. The answer to that was he is not a player at all. Not in the sense of a tour player. So I wonder about his qualifications. He did go to school and was educated in tennis. But what exactly does that mean? If Fritz does upset Stefanos here...it is going to raise some more questions to me. Tsitsipas seems to be stalled a bit. But number three isn't all that bad...is it?
don_budge
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Yeah...two breaks in a row for Fritz. I have always wondered about that little hitch in the Tsitsipas motion. So far he has not found his timing (tempo) on the serve. Can he right the ship? One thing that I was impressed with when he first appeared on the scene was his ability to grind it out. He could get behind and claw his way back into a match. A very necessary trait in tennis. Does he still have that...it has been a question of mine for a while.don_budge
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Now the moment of truth for Fritz...serving out the set. First point ace. Missed first serve...30-0. Near ace...40-0. Missed first serve...game. No muss...no fuss. Just the way it is supposed to be. Huge first set from Taylor...now the question. Can he maintain the pressure on his opponent?don_budge
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He is going to have to claw his way back. Fritz beat him comprehensively in the 1st set. Tsitsipas is a slightly better mover, his forehand is equal to the Fritz forehand. Fritz has a better serve. The big advantage Fritz has is his backhand. It is much more of a weapon that Stef's. Fritz does not need to runaround to hit forehand. This looks like bad matchup for Tsitsipas. If Tsitsipas comes forward to the net, he better have Fritz under duress.
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Originally posted by stroke View PostFritz looked like a FO contender with that win over Tsitsipas.
Fritz a contender. Let's just see how he does in the next round before we go all jumping the gun here. Mr. Pencil and Holger (Brat) Rune next. Runestone even. A Nordic thing.don_budge
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Originally posted by stroke View PostRune routines Med in 1st set, really pushing him around and hurting him with very good drop shots. It will be interesting to see Med's response.don_budge
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