Very occasionally a player will come along who is compelling and beautiful to watch. They give pleasure. One poster is deeply attracted to the shotmaking and genius of Roger Federer and John McEnroe - and who can blame him? These players are so unusually skilful and can do shots other players simply cannot. McEnroe has the deftest touch and best hands we have ever seen in tennis, and Roger's game is so effortless, complete, and downright explosive. You could watch both players all day.
I guess in most people's books the super talented bracket consists of Roger, McEnroe and Nastase. But, for me, Miroslav Mecir isn't far behind, if he's behind at all.
The one thing Mecir has that the afore mentioned don't quite have in such spades is misdirection. Slight of hand and misdirection is the reason why I like watching Mecir more than any other player I have ever watched. I once saw him play on an outside court at Wimbledon where he turned an opponent inside out without hardly moving or breaking into a sweat. He was so head and shoulders above his opponent he seemed to be walking most of the time.
Below is a clip of Mecir playing Lendl. It's a little grainy but full of brilliance and majesty. The backhand winner he hits in the point starting at 2:37 sums up what I love so much about Mecir. No one sees that backhand coming and it leaves Lendl somewhat in his tracks, and you get a brief replay of that wonderful shot too. Mecir's backhand is one of the most unusual and brilliant two-handers in the game when is comes to disguise and switching direction.
For me, it's not about how many slams a player wins, it's about getting pleasure out of watching skill and craft.
I guess in most people's books the super talented bracket consists of Roger, McEnroe and Nastase. But, for me, Miroslav Mecir isn't far behind, if he's behind at all.
The one thing Mecir has that the afore mentioned don't quite have in such spades is misdirection. Slight of hand and misdirection is the reason why I like watching Mecir more than any other player I have ever watched. I once saw him play on an outside court at Wimbledon where he turned an opponent inside out without hardly moving or breaking into a sweat. He was so head and shoulders above his opponent he seemed to be walking most of the time.
Below is a clip of Mecir playing Lendl. It's a little grainy but full of brilliance and majesty. The backhand winner he hits in the point starting at 2:37 sums up what I love so much about Mecir. No one sees that backhand coming and it leaves Lendl somewhat in his tracks, and you get a brief replay of that wonderful shot too. Mecir's backhand is one of the most unusual and brilliant two-handers in the game when is comes to disguise and switching direction.
For me, it's not about how many slams a player wins, it's about getting pleasure out of watching skill and craft.
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