Hard to say what was most impressive about Fonseca win over Rublev in 3 sets. Rublev did not go away, he fought as hard as he could for the 3rd set, but Fonseca seems to have that Fed Nadal mentality of wanting to win every set period. There is no rope-a-dope reprieve. Fonseca appears to have entered the conversation of the best forehand in the world, along with Sinner, Alcaraz, and Novak.
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Great win for Fonseca. It was on the cards, as stroke predicted. In a game these days where everyone possesses a great forehand, Fonseca's is just that bit better than most. You simply cannot afford to leave anything sitting around or it's as good as toast. The thing is his backhand isn't too shoddy either - in fact it is beautifully produced. It will be interesting to see how far he goes in the tournament. He seems a decent bloke...not too much drama.Stotty
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Originally posted by stotty View PostGreat win for Fonseca. It was on the cards, as stroke predicted. In a game these days where everyone possesses a great forehand, Fonseca's is just that bit better than most. You simply cannot afford to leave anything sitting around or it's as good as toast. The thing is his backhand isn't too shoddy either - in fact it is beautifully produced. It will be interesting to see how far he goes in the tournament. He seems a decent bloke...not too much drama.
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Sheer velocity, at only 18 years old and NOT a giant, Joao Fonseca serve at 140 MPH in his first round match and one of his forehands is the fastest of the event so far at 112 MPH. That's some company he's keeping on the forehand side.
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Winners, winners all the time from everywhere. "Defense is dead" -- Zverev
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Rublev was arguably outplaying Joao in the fist set, then the youngster took over with 7 fabulous shots in the tiebreak.
Dare I type this on this forum?, his inside-out backhand is Martina Hingis-esque
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This gallery has 3 photos.Last edited by jimlosaltos; 01-14-2025, 10:58 AM.
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View Post
Dare I type this on this forum?, his inside-out backhand is Martina Hingis-esque
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Stotty
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Originally posted by stotty View Post
Yes he hit that inside-out backhand beautifully a number of times. de Minaur also played some excellent inside-out backhands against his opponent today. It's a shot we are seeing more of these days from a number of players and I am not sure why.
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Originally posted by stroke View PostRublev played a very good match. 33 winners, 25 errors over 3 sets is good stuff. Fonseca looks like at the very least the number 3 favorite at RG.
Supposedly that his best surface. If this is what he's like on his non-best surface I want see him on clay !
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Thai player that took Daniil Medvedev to 5 sets was playing in his first ATP Main Draw match ever. Was up 2-1 , i.e. would have on best of 3.
Special bye because AO positions itself as the "Asian Slam".
Medy: “I watched his matches and didn’t see this level, so I was surprised,” acknowledged Medvedev in his on-court interview. “If he plays like this every match, life can be good… I wish he can play like this every match. [Not] if I’m facing him. You need to be consistent to make it in tennis, and I wish this for him.”
Wiiki bio link here
Kasidit Samrej (Thai: กษิดิศ สำเร็จ; born 26 January 2001) is a Thai tennis player. He has a career high ATP singles ranking of world No. 413 achieved on 25 November 2024. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of No. 822 achieved on 12 June 2023.[1] He is currently the No. 1 Thai player.[2]
Samrej represents Thailand at the Davis Cup, where he has a W/L record of 10–8.[3][4]
Samrej won the Asia-Pacific Wildcard Playoff for the 2025 Australian Open,[5] making him the first Thai man to compete in the singles event in a Grand Slam tournament since Danai Udomchoke at the 2012 Australian Open.[6][7] He lost in the first round to fifth seed Daniil Medvedev in five sets.[8][9]
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Great news for La Monf, not so good for Gio, the French veteran won in 5 sets.
Sadly, Gio played like a "Serve Bot", got 19 aces BUT didn't have a single break point against 38 year old, part time ATP Monfils. I hope that is a temporary regression for Gio.
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Originally posted by jimlosaltos View Post
You keep mentioned him for Roland Garros and I'm starting to believe !
Supposedly that his best surface. If this is what he's like on his non-best surface I want see him on clay !
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Yeah I guess this is obvious, but I guess if you have a big forehand, you are going to have a huge serve, as they seem to be related. But what I noticed is he plays well in big points. On atptour.com, you can go to challenger TV and watch free tennis matches, and the matches are saved (so you can skip 10 seconds ahead to get to the point). I watched the recent challenger with him playing Ethan Quinn. He just overpowered Ethan Quinn, which is crazy because Ethan Quinn hits really, really hard. But there was one game I think he was down 0 - 40 on his serve and he came back and won that game.
I think that combination of forehand and serve, plus playing well in big points you are going to win a lot. The only thing I saw in the challenger is he would sometime go for too much and miss by a lot on some shots. But if it goes to his forehand, it is almost a guaranteed winner.
Last edited by neilchok; 01-14-2025, 03:27 PM.
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