Originally posted by don_budge
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Originally posted by seano
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What I got yesterday was a good look at young Carlos Alcaraz whom I introduced to the forum some years ago. Who's next? Is it Carlos? After his performance yesterday it is totally inconclusive but there is one thing that glared at me and it just so happens to go along with some of the discussion here lately. You know the one...about less than perfect service motions. Somebody save this kid before it is too late. He has two totally separate hesitations in his motion that are going to play havoc with his rhythm and tempo for his entire career. Yesterday it was glaring as he was a total victim to the Nadal psy-op. Nadal had him so psyched out he couldn't hit a routine serve, forehand or backhand. Never mind volleys. It never occurred to him to get to the net. Another one dimensional prodigy. No plan B. Just hard and harder. We'll see. The jury is still out obviously. He is going to improve and he is going to climb the rankings just as Jannik Sinner did. Some were predicting such greatness for Sinner. "The Greatest of All Time" was even mentioned. I'm a bit more reserved. Reluctant even. Skeptical. I'm a skeptic. Wait and see. "Who's Next" anyone? Such a great rock album. But the GOAT? "Meet the new boss, same as the old boss".
Three names jump out at me. Don't get me wrong. This is personal. I am biased. My bias is one of interest. Players of interest are Daniel Evans, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Dominic Thiem and Aslan Karatsev. Alexei Popyrin and all the rest come in a distant second. Bublik, Berrettini and Rublev. Caspar Ruud. All of them. Supporting characters. The round of sixteen. Things are heating up. Separation...degrees of separation. Developing along the story line. Match of the day? Keeping an eye on Aslan Karatsev. His runaway takedown after a slow start against Diego Schwartzman was really, really impressive. At the end, Diego was run around like a yoyo on a string. Aslan delivering haymakers on both sides from the forehand and backhand. He just pounded the Argentine into submission and that is exactly what it was. Daniel Evans is clever. Very, very clever. Now he has Alexander Zverev in his sights. Tsitsipas wants to make it a game that is not solely dependent upon his serve. Reason why is that the serve is inconsistent at times. He will get away with it against Ruud and Paire. A long list of names.
The quarters are looming. Many pretenders on the sidelines now. Eight more to come today. Packing their bags. Personally, I would love to see a rematch of Berrettini and Karatsev.
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