The tour continues to evolve as Father Time slowly but surely works his eternal magic on this earthly plane. It doesn't happen overnight but one day it seems that you wake up and realise..."I'm getting too old for this". At the same time, the youth of yesterday become today's men and they start to flex their muscles nudging the ageing aside. It isn't a pretty process and it can be just as cruel as Darwin's "Survival of the Species" or "Survival of the Fittest". Stefanos Tsitsipas and Andrey Rublev emerged from the pack last week in a tournament that gave us a new look from the "same old, same old". There are others in the pipe that are starting to waken and realizing that the field is wide open. It is time to man up. New comers like Lorenzo Musetti and Jannik Sinner sense that their time is coming. With a couple of years of seasoning...who knows? With a couple years of ageing on SeƱor Nadal and Herr Djokovic the writing is on the wall. They aren't done just yet. But it is inevitable. No one here gets out alive. Jim Morrison said that as he was drowning in his own vomit once.
All eyes on Rafael Nadal, Andrey Rublev and Stefanos Tsitsipas. Lots of questions to be answered here. It is all about performance. How does one react to recent developments? Nadal is the most feared player on tour. Rublev and Tsitsipas want to take their status up a notch. Consistency is the hallmark of great tennis players. Nadal is etched in stone. Rublev and Tsitsy are works in progress. Daniel Evans has raised a few eyebrows himself. This is the wild card. How is he going to react with his huge breakthrough last week? One school of thought says that the only way to go for him now is down. How much pluck does he have? Does he still have any ambition left after such a performance? Questions. Answer the questions...you jerk! From the mouth of an ever evolving John McEnroe, so many years ago.
Comment