The Official Tennis Thread

Started by Doogie Browser, January 26, 2010, 11:25:28 AM

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Milltown Row2

So the fact that Nadal has less slams than Fed, makes him a better player? As all the slams are equally as hard to win according to Angelo  ::)

So with that logic Fed is currently the best, Nadal and Novak could pass him but until then three can only be one winner.

Missed the men's final, caught the ladies final and Serena is getting to that point that she's not enjoying it anymore.
None of us are getting out of here alive, so please stop treating yourself like an after thought. Ea

Angelo

Quote from: Milltown Row2 on September 11, 2019, 09:52:14 AM
So the fact that Nadal has less slams than Fed, makes him a better player? As all the slams are equally as hard to win according to Angelo  ::)

So with that logic Fed is currently the best, Nadal and Novak could pass him but until then three can only be one winner.

Missed the men's final, caught the ladies final and Serena is getting to that point that she's not enjoying it anymore.

It's not over yet, Nadal is now on 19, he has reached that number 3 years younger than Federer did, he has reached that number in 14 less slams than it took Federer. That's point one.

Point two. Nadal has had Federer and Djokovic throughout all his slams, Djokovic likewise. Federer hadn't, Federer won 12 slams from 03-07. At this point Nadal and Djokovic were teenagers for the most part, Nadal was primarily a clay court specialist while Djokovic didn't win his first slam until Australia 2008, aged 20. In the 03-07 era, Federer's main challengers were the likes of Roddick (1 year younger than Federer), Hewitt(1 year older), Safin (1 year older), Nalbandian(1 year younger), Davydenko (same age). All these guys were completely washed up by their mid 20s, they couldn't live with the Nadal Djokovic era despite being in the prime of the years. Sampras was retired before Federer won a slam. Look at some of Federer's final opponents in that time (03-07) - Phillippoussis, Gonzalez, Hewitt, Roddick, Bagdathis, Safin and an over the hill Agassi. Federer made hay in a weak era before either Nadal or Djokovic arrived (and the support cast of the likes of Murray, Wawrinka, Del Potro, Cilic, Berdych, Tsonga, Ferrer etc). These guys would all have won slams in the 03-07 era you would suspect, Federer's generation slid completely off the radar when they came in. Roddick survived the top 10 for a while but not long, the rest of them became forgotten men.

Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

It's about context, Federer won an awful lot of easy slams when the mens game was at a fairly low ebb. Nadal and Djokovic have pretty much won the entirety of their slams when tennis was at an elite level. People go on about Nadal and clay but if Nadal wasn't about then Federer and Djokovic would have at least 4/5 French slams each, Nadal has eliminated them on 12 occasions combined.

Nadal/Djokovic/Federer are all courters, they just happen to perform best on different surfaces - Nadal (clay), Federer (grass), Djokovic (hard). Hard and grass play relatively similarly but clay is a different ball game, so when you look at it from a calendar perspective - 3/4 of the slams are tipped in the favour of Djokovic and Federer - which makes Nadal's numbers even more remarkable.
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Angelo

Quote from: mouview on September 11, 2019, 08:55:30 AM
Fed's backhand was in superb working order v Nadal in SW19, watch back. Commentators remarked on how much it has improved.

It was but it's often been what has let him down too.
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Ed Ricketts

Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.
Doc would listen to any kind of nonsense and change it for you to a kind of wisdom.

Milltown Row2

Also how easy has Nadal won those french titles? Seems there's no effort being made by the other tennis pros
None of us are getting out of here alive, so please stop treating yourself like an after thought. Ea

Angelo

Quote from: Milltown Row2 on September 11, 2019, 11:38:41 AM
Also how easy has Nadal won those french titles? Seems there's no effort being made by the other tennis pros

He has beaten Federer and Djokovic 12 times at RG. Guys like Isner, Raonic, Cilic and Anderson who have a game that is almost completely built around their serve will always struggle on clay. Beating Thiem on clay is also one of the toughest challenges about right now.
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Angelo

Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 11:18:03 AM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.

Nadal already has more slams in his 30s than Federer. Djokovic has the same amount of slams in his 30s as Federer.
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Ed Ricketts

Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 11:49:07 AM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 11:18:03 AM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.

Nadal already has more slams in his 30s than Federer. Djokovic has the same amount of slams in his 30s as Federer.

And neither have had to deal with a couple of all time greats with five years on them while they picked up these titles in their 30s.

There just isn't enough concurrence for a fair statistical comparison, no matter how much you try to force it.
Doc would listen to any kind of nonsense and change it for you to a kind of wisdom.

Angelo

#698
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 12:46:16 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 11:49:07 AM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 11:18:03 AM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.

Nadal already has more slams in his 30s than Federer. Djokovic has the same amount of slams in his 30s as Federer.

And neither have had to deal with a couple of all time greats with five years on them while they picked up these titles in their 30s.

There just isn't enough concurrence for a fair statistical comparison, no matter how much you try to force it.

You're right, he didn't. Those five years he had on them he was able to pick up 12 slams in against guys who fell off the radar as soon as Nadal and Djokovic started to come to the age of winning slams.

It's a contradictory argument.

You need to look at the statistics and the context around them, they don't make good reading for Federer. They don't make good reading for Roddick, Hewitt, Safin, Nalbandian, Davydenko or the rest of that era either.

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omaghjoe

Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 01:54:06 PM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 12:46:16 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 11:49:07 AM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 11:18:03 AM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.

Nadal already has more slams in his 30s than Federer. Djokovic has the same amount of slams in his 30s as Federer.

And neither have had to deal with a couple of all time greats with five years on them while they picked up these titles in their 30s.

There just isn't enough concurrence for a fair statistical comparison, no matter how much you try to force it.

You're right, he didn't. Those five years he had on them he was able to pick up 12 slams in against guys who fell off the radar as soon as Nadal and Djokovic started to come to the age of winning slams.

It's a contradictory argument.

You need to look at the statistics and the context around them, they don't make good reading for Federer. They don't make good reading for Roddick, Hewitt, Safin, Nalbandian, Davydenko or the rest of that era either.

Except that Fed raised the bar and changed  Tennis to such a degree during those times that his competitors just could not compete and their games were too embedded to adapt.
The next generation had the advantage of using him as an example to aspire too.

Its like all those solo dummies Frank McGuigan used to sell, you could say he wouldnt have done that to defenders in the early 90s as they were better but he raised the bar for forwards so backs raised theirs.

omaghjoe

Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 07:56:53 AM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 10, 2019, 10:18:35 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 10, 2019, 12:06:53 AM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 11:24:58 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 11:18:45 PM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 10:49:23 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 10:37:41 PM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 10:22:41 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 06:50:19 PM
If Medvedev can sustain or build up this year's summer hard court form then he will win a hard court slam next year for sure.

I think Djokovic might now struggle to reach 20, the next gen will all be taking confidence from Medvedev and they will have the belief that they are as good or better than them. The problem for Djokovic is that they are all at their best on hard courts, guys like Zverev, Tsitsipas, Rublev, Khachanov, FAA and Shapovalov all have a game made for hard courts and that's Djokovic's bread and butter.

I think the changing of guard is now going to come a lot sooner than people think and I think we'll have a next gen slam champion for sure next season.

I think Nadal will just do enough (injury permitting) to oust Federer in slam titles and rightfully take his place as the GOAT. He still has no peers on clay and I think if he gets the next two years of play without injuries or setbacks he will pick up one or two RG. I think last night might be his last non-clay slam though.

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

Thats like saying Mick Lyons was a better footballer than Maurice Fitzgerald

There's no real question between Nadal and Federer. Nadal is miles ahead. The real debate is between Nadal and Djokovic.

Nadal has a superior head to head over Federer and Djokovic at slams.

Federer made hay when the competition was weak. He won 12 of his 20 slams between 2003-07. That was before Nadal and Djokovic established themselves, he was up against the likes of Hewitt, Roddick, Nalbandian, Davydenko and Safin for slams. All these guys were busted flushes in their mid 20s, they struggled to compete with the likes of Murray, Wawrinka, Tsonga, Berdych, Del Potro, Cilic, Feeder etc nevermind Nadal and Djokovic and this was Federer's main competition then.

Look at the early finals Federer had - Philippoussis, Safin, Roddick, Hewitt, a mid 30s Agassi, a teenage Nadal, Gonzalez.

It's a bit like when Gooch would rip it up in an All Ireland final against poor Cork and Mayo teams but struggle in the big tests.

Federer's record is padded by having a 5 year head start on Nadal and Djokovic. There's no way he would have got to 20 had he came through at the same time. The question for no 1 remains between Nadal and Djokovic but Federer is no 3.

Thats all fine and well but he's still a bull in a China shop

Clearly you don't watch him much.

A bull in a china shop would not dominate clay court tennis, you actually need to be able to craft and create shots rather than bludgeon the ball past your opponents and serve heavy like hard and grass courts require.

You clearly don't know finesse when you see it. Fed is obviously more technically gifted and naturally talented than either he just doesnt have the same physical attributes.

Finesse is aesthetic. He doesn't have the same physical attributes but neither does he have the same craft and problem solving ability that Nadal has.

Problem solving?? Didnt think Maths ability came into it but each to their own. When you are having a GOAT of all time debate it is entirely subjective.

Anyway Nadal has 12 Roland Garros and you could also say they are of lesser value as clay only takes up a portion of the season this gives more incentive and time for clay specialists to adapt to hard court and grass and the reverse for the hard/grass court specialists.
It also means the most talented players will always concentrate on the harder surfaces leading to overall less competitive clay competitions. So its safe to say Nadal has had a less competitive run at Roland Garros than Federer had in the early part of his career.
Also when Nadal was injured Fed and Djoikvic duly picked up their Roland Garros titles so its save to say they can play clay.

It could also be said that Fed in the early part of his career blew away the opposition by raising the bar to a different level, he brought shots that no one had ever seen before. Its safe to say he blew the competition out of the water and they couldnt adapt I would say because their games were too entrenched to adapt and prob too psychologically damaged fro the trimmings he gave them. The new crop coming behind them had a target and example to aim at (Fed) thus their playing style could be adapted as it was less embedded and they didn't have the mental baggage as being at the top and being knocked off their perch.
I dont buy for a minute that the competition was overly weak back then, fair enough there was no one else compared to Nadal and Djokivic, and while Roddick was limited he remained competitive for a long time, Hewitt was decent, and Safin certainly I would put alongside any of the 2nd tier of this era esp on hard courts, tho he did have a dubious temperament.

You can ream off all the stats you want but you can say any of them are skewed: Nadals advantage on clay, Fed to old, Nadal injured, Djokvic too young.....
At the end of the day I do like Feds style more, he has a very natural style always makes things look easy like anyone could do it, the single handed backhand at that level is a joy to behold. Nadal and Djokvic always look like they are playing at the limits of their skill level and their physical prowess is taking over.

Problem solving was what got Nadal the slam on Sunday evening, he was in bother but he found a way out with an opponent who was playing the tennis of his life.

The stats aren't skewed, it's remarkable what Nadal has done because of everything, the injuries, the fact clay only takes up 1/4 of the slams, the era he came into. People like to use Nadal's dominance on clay as a stick to beat him with but it's even more remarkable if anything. There's twice as many hard slams as clay every year, the same amount of grass slams and Nadal has ended up on 19 despite being dismissed as a one dimensional clay player. He's untouchable on clay and over the years he has altered his game to not only be competitive outside clay but successful on it. He has 7 non-clay slam titles now, 4 at the US Open which is more than Djokovic has and one less than Federer. Djokovic and Federer have 2 clay court slams between them and only Djokovic has beaten Nadal at RG, once.

Greatness is not about style over substance, as gallsman said, Federer's backhand looks great aesthetically but is arguably his weakness as it it is not reliable enough, when opponents go after it they get success. Federer's biggest weapon is his serving, nothing too much in the aesthetics there. Nadal gets unfairly cast type as some sort of athletic freak who wouldn't know what to do with a racket. Nadal has probably the greatest forehand in the game (I don't think it's as lethal as it was pre 2014 though), he has by far the best overhead smash in the game, his drop shots are definitely up there (being a clay courter) and he has worked tirelessly on his backhand and slice over the years to make it a weapon. If you look across their games, there's not too many shots of Federer you'd choose over Nadal, the serve is the only one with notable gap between them.

I think Nadal is probably the one who is furthest off his peak years at the minute now out of the big 3. The injuries have taken a toll on his body and he has had to change the way he plays his game. The game with Medvedev was the only game he played over 4 hours this year, his longest one up until last night had been 3 hrs 15 minutes against Kyrgios at Wimbledon. He made 3 finals and a SF this year, he has moved away what he did in his peak because his knees won't sustain it. Where Nadal has evolved and adapted Federer and Djokovic haven't really had to as the scales are already tipped in their favour with the slam calendar.

There is no slam of lesser value, you might have bought a little too much into an anglo-centric viewpoint that Wimbledon is the be all and end all. They're all worth the same.

If no slam is of lesser value then when are you trying to devalue Feds to make your point? Nadal just won a Grand slam without playing Fed or Djokivic surely according to your criteria youd have this as an undervalued one?

He wins the Roland Garros and is so dominant there because it is his preferred surface and the other top players dont like it and dont have the same time on clay to adjust their game to make themselves competitive. There is no question that it is less competitive that the other surfaces

Fed backhand a weakness :D :D. Opponents dont go after it.... they just dont want his forehand. By the way I would say the strongest part of his game is his footwork/balance. His biggest weakness is probably his speed around the court.

If Nadal is further off his peak years because of the strain on his body it is demonstration that he is using more physical effort to win.

trueblue1234

Guys I don't think either of you are ever going to move from your opinions so it's going to be a circular argument. Prob done to death now. Lets call it Deuce.
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Angelo

Quote from: omaghjoe on September 11, 2019, 04:15:57 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 01:54:06 PM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 12:46:16 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 11:49:07 AM
Quote from: Ed Ricketts on September 11, 2019, 11:18:03 AM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 10:49:42 AM
Federer made hay, 12 titles before Djokovic and Nadal arrived - 8 after. Since 2008 Nadal and Djokovic have won 16 slams each, Federer 8.

Perhaps there's a flip side to this, which is that Federer has done remarkably well to keep picking up slams into his late 30s against two all time greats who both have five years on him.

The age difference between Federer and the other two mean that it's impossible to make a fair comparison, as much as you'd like to try. In the end this debate is all about opinions, it can't won by stats.

Nadal already has more slams in his 30s than Federer. Djokovic has the same amount of slams in his 30s as Federer.

And neither have had to deal with a couple of all time greats with five years on them while they picked up these titles in their 30s.

There just isn't enough concurrence for a fair statistical comparison, no matter how much you try to force it.

You're right, he didn't. Those five years he had on them he was able to pick up 12 slams in against guys who fell off the radar as soon as Nadal and Djokovic started to come to the age of winning slams.

It's a contradictory argument.

You need to look at the statistics and the context around them, they don't make good reading for Federer. They don't make good reading for Roddick, Hewitt, Safin, Nalbandian, Davydenko or the rest of that era either.

Except that Fed raised the bar and changed  Tennis to such a degree during those times that his competitors just could not compete and their games were too embedded to adapt.
The next generation had the advantage of using him as an example to aspire too.

Its like all those solo dummies Frank McGuigan used to sell, you could say he wouldnt have done that to defenders in the early 90s as they were better but he raised the bar for forwards so backs raised theirs.

That's fine but the Federer ended up struggling badly against Nadal and Djokovic once they came on the scene

Nadal has actually won as many non-clay court slams as Federer had since that dominant spell he had between 03-07 and Djokovic has won more non-clay slams in that time. Djokovic has won 15 slams between hard and grass courts from 08-19, Nadal and Federer are on 8 each from 08-19 between grass and hard courts.

You can make the point that Federer raised the bar but Nadal and Djokovic bettered him.

I wouldn't be so sure Nadal and Djokovic will go on and dominate the slams next year and the year after. I think the end of them will come suddenly. Nadal knows it, he was as emotional as I've ever seen him after winning on Sunday, he knew it represented one of his last chances. He'll be hoping he'll add another couple of slams in the next two years but I don't see him getting much more than that.

It's going to be very tight at the top at the end of it. People think Djokovic is going to dominate the next few years, I wouldn't be sure of that at all. He's 32 now, he had a shoulder injury this year. He went 8 slams without a victory after he captured the French Open in 2016 and ended up needing surgery on a troublesome elbow. Medvedev has arrived, I expect Zverev, Tsistispas, FAA, Rublev, Shapovalov and those guys to now start getting their act together, Medvedev has shown them the way. The slams for the big 3 will get tougher and tougher from here on in.
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Angelo

Quote from: omaghjoe on September 11, 2019, 04:20:30 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 07:56:53 AM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 10, 2019, 10:18:35 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 10, 2019, 12:06:53 AM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 11:24:58 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 11:18:45 PM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 10:49:23 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 10:37:41 PM
Quote from: omaghjoe on September 09, 2019, 10:22:41 PM
Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 06:50:19 PM
If Medvedev can sustain or build up this year's summer hard court form then he will win a hard court slam next year for sure.

I think Djokovic might now struggle to reach 20, the next gen will all be taking confidence from Medvedev and they will have the belief that they are as good or better than them. The problem for Djokovic is that they are all at their best on hard courts, guys like Zverev, Tsitsipas, Rublev, Khachanov, FAA and Shapovalov all have a game made for hard courts and that's Djokovic's bread and butter.

I think the changing of guard is now going to come a lot sooner than people think and I think we'll have a next gen slam champion for sure next season.

I think Nadal will just do enough (injury permitting) to oust Federer in slam titles and rightfully take his place as the GOAT. He still has no peers on clay and I think if he gets the next two years of play without injuries or setbacks he will pick up one or two RG. I think last night might be his last non-clay slam though.

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

Thats like saying Mick Lyons was a better footballer than Maurice Fitzgerald

There's no real question between Nadal and Federer. Nadal is miles ahead. The real debate is between Nadal and Djokovic.

Nadal has a superior head to head over Federer and Djokovic at slams.

Federer made hay when the competition was weak. He won 12 of his 20 slams between 2003-07. That was before Nadal and Djokovic established themselves, he was up against the likes of Hewitt, Roddick, Nalbandian, Davydenko and Safin for slams. All these guys were busted flushes in their mid 20s, they struggled to compete with the likes of Murray, Wawrinka, Tsonga, Berdych, Del Potro, Cilic, Feeder etc nevermind Nadal and Djokovic and this was Federer's main competition then.

Look at the early finals Federer had - Philippoussis, Safin, Roddick, Hewitt, a mid 30s Agassi, a teenage Nadal, Gonzalez.

It's a bit like when Gooch would rip it up in an All Ireland final against poor Cork and Mayo teams but struggle in the big tests.

Federer's record is padded by having a 5 year head start on Nadal and Djokovic. There's no way he would have got to 20 had he came through at the same time. The question for no 1 remains between Nadal and Djokovic but Federer is no 3.

Thats all fine and well but he's still a bull in a China shop

Clearly you don't watch him much.

A bull in a china shop would not dominate clay court tennis, you actually need to be able to craft and create shots rather than bludgeon the ball past your opponents and serve heavy like hard and grass courts require.

You clearly don't know finesse when you see it. Fed is obviously more technically gifted and naturally talented than either he just doesnt have the same physical attributes.

Finesse is aesthetic. He doesn't have the same physical attributes but neither does he have the same craft and problem solving ability that Nadal has.

Problem solving?? Didnt think Maths ability came into it but each to their own. When you are having a GOAT of all time debate it is entirely subjective.

Anyway Nadal has 12 Roland Garros and you could also say they are of lesser value as clay only takes up a portion of the season this gives more incentive and time for clay specialists to adapt to hard court and grass and the reverse for the hard/grass court specialists.
It also means the most talented players will always concentrate on the harder surfaces leading to overall less competitive clay competitions. So its safe to say Nadal has had a less competitive run at Roland Garros than Federer had in the early part of his career.
Also when Nadal was injured Fed and Djoikvic duly picked up their Roland Garros titles so its save to say they can play clay.

It could also be said that Fed in the early part of his career blew away the opposition by raising the bar to a different level, he brought shots that no one had ever seen before. Its safe to say he blew the competition out of the water and they couldnt adapt I would say because their games were too entrenched to adapt and prob too psychologically damaged fro the trimmings he gave them. The new crop coming behind them had a target and example to aim at (Fed) thus their playing style could be adapted as it was less embedded and they didn't have the mental baggage as being at the top and being knocked off their perch.
I dont buy for a minute that the competition was overly weak back then, fair enough there was no one else compared to Nadal and Djokivic, and while Roddick was limited he remained competitive for a long time, Hewitt was decent, and Safin certainly I would put alongside any of the 2nd tier of this era esp on hard courts, tho he did have a dubious temperament.

You can ream off all the stats you want but you can say any of them are skewed: Nadals advantage on clay, Fed to old, Nadal injured, Djokvic too young.....
At the end of the day I do like Feds style more, he has a very natural style always makes things look easy like anyone could do it, the single handed backhand at that level is a joy to behold. Nadal and Djokvic always look like they are playing at the limits of their skill level and their physical prowess is taking over.

Problem solving was what got Nadal the slam on Sunday evening, he was in bother but he found a way out with an opponent who was playing the tennis of his life.

The stats aren't skewed, it's remarkable what Nadal has done because of everything, the injuries, the fact clay only takes up 1/4 of the slams, the era he came into. People like to use Nadal's dominance on clay as a stick to beat him with but it's even more remarkable if anything. There's twice as many hard slams as clay every year, the same amount of grass slams and Nadal has ended up on 19 despite being dismissed as a one dimensional clay player. He's untouchable on clay and over the years he has altered his game to not only be competitive outside clay but successful on it. He has 7 non-clay slam titles now, 4 at the US Open which is more than Djokovic has and one less than Federer. Djokovic and Federer have 2 clay court slams between them and only Djokovic has beaten Nadal at RG, once.

Greatness is not about style over substance, as gallsman said, Federer's backhand looks great aesthetically but is arguably his weakness as it it is not reliable enough, when opponents go after it they get success. Federer's biggest weapon is his serving, nothing too much in the aesthetics there. Nadal gets unfairly cast type as some sort of athletic freak who wouldn't know what to do with a racket. Nadal has probably the greatest forehand in the game (I don't think it's as lethal as it was pre 2014 though), he has by far the best overhead smash in the game, his drop shots are definitely up there (being a clay courter) and he has worked tirelessly on his backhand and slice over the years to make it a weapon. If you look across their games, there's not too many shots of Federer you'd choose over Nadal, the serve is the only one with notable gap between them.

I think Nadal is probably the one who is furthest off his peak years at the minute now out of the big 3. The injuries have taken a toll on his body and he has had to change the way he plays his game. The game with Medvedev was the only game he played over 4 hours this year, his longest one up until last night had been 3 hrs 15 minutes against Kyrgios at Wimbledon. He made 3 finals and a SF this year, he has moved away what he did in his peak because his knees won't sustain it. Where Nadal has evolved and adapted Federer and Djokovic haven't really had to as the scales are already tipped in their favour with the slam calendar.

There is no slam of lesser value, you might have bought a little too much into an anglo-centric viewpoint that Wimbledon is the be all and end all. They're all worth the same.

If no slam is of lesser value then when are you trying to devalue Feds to make your point? Nadal just won a Grand slam without playing Fed or Djokivic surely according to your criteria youd have this as an undervalued one?

He wins the Roland Garros and is so dominant there because it is his preferred surface and the other top players dont like it and dont have the same time on clay to adjust their game to make themselves competitive. There is no question that it is less competitive that the other surfaces

Fed backhand a weakness :D :D. Opponents dont go after it.... they just dont want his forehand. By the way I would say the strongest part of his game is his footwork/balance. His biggest weakness is probably his speed around the court.

If Nadal is further off his peak years because of the strain on his body it is demonstration that he is using more physical effort to win.

Context, Nadal, Federer and Djokovic are all courters. It's not as if Federer and Djokovic are like Pete Sampras, in that they are one dimensional players, unlike Sampras they have a lot more to their game than a big serve and only for the were around the same time as the greatest clay courter to ever play the game by a country mile they'd have 4 or 5 French Opens each. So every slam is worth the same US, Australian, French and Wimbledon.

The currency of the open in terms of competition is completely different. If you can't see that Federer's main rivals in that 03-07 era were powderpuff then you are an ostrich.

Roddick
Hewitt
Nalbandian
Safin
Davydenko

All washed up by their mid 20s.

Phillippoussis, Gonzalez, Bagdathis and an over the hill Agassi in slam finals at that time?

It's about context and there's no way you can say those slams are anywhere near as impressive as what Djokovic and Nadal accomplished in the subsequent years.

12 slams in 5 years (11 of those in a 4 year period) pre Nadal and Djokovic breakout against 8 in 12 years during the post breakout of Nadal and Djokovic. Unfortunately there are the kind of stats which the Fedheads try to run away from but they can't, all the smokescreens in the world won't diminish them which is why they usually have to lower the tone with completely unsubstantiated allegations against Nadal and Djokovic.
GAA FUNDING CHEATS CHEAT US ALL

omaghjoe

Quote from: Angelo on September 11, 2019, 04:45:06 PM
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Quote from: Angelo on September 09, 2019, 06:50:19 PM
If Medvedev can sustain or build up this year's summer hard court form then he will win a hard court slam next year for sure.

I think Djokovic might now struggle to reach 20, the next gen will all be taking confidence from Medvedev and they will have the belief that they are as good or better than them. The problem for Djokovic is that they are all at their best on hard courts, guys like Zverev, Tsitsipas, Rublev, Khachanov, FAA and Shapovalov all have a game made for hard courts and that's Djokovic's bread and butter.

I think the changing of guard is now going to come a lot sooner than people think and I think we'll have a next gen slam champion for sure next season.

I think Nadal will just do enough (injury permitting) to oust Federer in slam titles and rightfully take his place as the GOAT. He still has no peers on clay and I think if he gets the next two years of play without injuries or setbacks he will pick up one or two RG. I think last night might be his last non-clay slam though.

;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

Thats like saying Mick Lyons was a better footballer than Maurice Fitzgerald

There's no real question between Nadal and Federer. Nadal is miles ahead. The real debate is between Nadal and Djokovic.

Nadal has a superior head to head over Federer and Djokovic at slams.

Federer made hay when the competition was weak. He won 12 of his 20 slams between 2003-07. That was before Nadal and Djokovic established themselves, he was up against the likes of Hewitt, Roddick, Nalbandian, Davydenko and Safin for slams. All these guys were busted flushes in their mid 20s, they struggled to compete with the likes of Murray, Wawrinka, Tsonga, Berdych, Del Potro, Cilic, Feeder etc nevermind Nadal and Djokovic and this was Federer's main competition then.

Look at the early finals Federer had - Philippoussis, Safin, Roddick, Hewitt, a mid 30s Agassi, a teenage Nadal, Gonzalez.

It's a bit like when Gooch would rip it up in an All Ireland final against poor Cork and Mayo teams but struggle in the big tests.

Federer's record is padded by having a 5 year head start on Nadal and Djokovic. There's no way he would have got to 20 had he came through at the same time. The question for no 1 remains between Nadal and Djokovic but Federer is no 3.

Thats all fine and well but he's still a bull in a China shop

Clearly you don't watch him much.

A bull in a china shop would not dominate clay court tennis, you actually need to be able to craft and create shots rather than bludgeon the ball past your opponents and serve heavy like hard and grass courts require.

You clearly don't know finesse when you see it. Fed is obviously more technically gifted and naturally talented than either he just doesnt have the same physical attributes.

Finesse is aesthetic. He doesn't have the same physical attributes but neither does he have the same craft and problem solving ability that Nadal has.

Problem solving?? Didnt think Maths ability came into it but each to their own. When you are having a GOAT of all time debate it is entirely subjective.

Anyway Nadal has 12 Roland Garros and you could also say they are of lesser value as clay only takes up a portion of the season this gives more incentive and time for clay specialists to adapt to hard court and grass and the reverse for the hard/grass court specialists.
It also means the most talented players will always concentrate on the harder surfaces leading to overall less competitive clay competitions. So its safe to say Nadal has had a less competitive run at Roland Garros than Federer had in the early part of his career.
Also when Nadal was injured Fed and Djoikvic duly picked up their Roland Garros titles so its save to say they can play clay.

It could also be said that Fed in the early part of his career blew away the opposition by raising the bar to a different level, he brought shots that no one had ever seen before. Its safe to say he blew the competition out of the water and they couldnt adapt I would say because their games were too entrenched to adapt and prob too psychologically damaged fro the trimmings he gave them. The new crop coming behind them had a target and example to aim at (Fed) thus their playing style could be adapted as it was less embedded and they didn't have the mental baggage as being at the top and being knocked off their perch.
I dont buy for a minute that the competition was overly weak back then, fair enough there was no one else compared to Nadal and Djokivic, and while Roddick was limited he remained competitive for a long time, Hewitt was decent, and Safin certainly I would put alongside any of the 2nd tier of this era esp on hard courts, tho he did have a dubious temperament.

You can ream off all the stats you want but you can say any of them are skewed: Nadals advantage on clay, Fed to old, Nadal injured, Djokvic too young.....
At the end of the day I do like Feds style more, he has a very natural style always makes things look easy like anyone could do it, the single handed backhand at that level is a joy to behold. Nadal and Djokvic always look like they are playing at the limits of their skill level and their physical prowess is taking over.

Problem solving was what got Nadal the slam on Sunday evening, he was in bother but he found a way out with an opponent who was playing the tennis of his life.

The stats aren't skewed, it's remarkable what Nadal has done because of everything, the injuries, the fact clay only takes up 1/4 of the slams, the era he came into. People like to use Nadal's dominance on clay as a stick to beat him with but it's even more remarkable if anything. There's twice as many hard slams as clay every year, the same amount of grass slams and Nadal has ended up on 19 despite being dismissed as a one dimensional clay player. He's untouchable on clay and over the years he has altered his game to not only be competitive outside clay but successful on it. He has 7 non-clay slam titles now, 4 at the US Open which is more than Djokovic has and one less than Federer. Djokovic and Federer have 2 clay court slams between them and only Djokovic has beaten Nadal at RG, once.

Greatness is not about style over substance, as gallsman said, Federer's backhand looks great aesthetically but is arguably his weakness as it it is not reliable enough, when opponents go after it they get success. Federer's biggest weapon is his serving, nothing too much in the aesthetics there. Nadal gets unfairly cast type as some sort of athletic freak who wouldn't know what to do with a racket. Nadal has probably the greatest forehand in the game (I don't think it's as lethal as it was pre 2014 though), he has by far the best overhead smash in the game, his drop shots are definitely up there (being a clay courter) and he has worked tirelessly on his backhand and slice over the years to make it a weapon. If you look across their games, there's not too many shots of Federer you'd choose over Nadal, the serve is the only one with notable gap between them.

I think Nadal is probably the one who is furthest off his peak years at the minute now out of the big 3. The injuries have taken a toll on his body and he has had to change the way he plays his game. The game with Medvedev was the only game he played over 4 hours this year, his longest one up until last night had been 3 hrs 15 minutes against Kyrgios at Wimbledon. He made 3 finals and a SF this year, he has moved away what he did in his peak because his knees won't sustain it. Where Nadal has evolved and adapted Federer and Djokovic haven't really had to as the scales are already tipped in their favour with the slam calendar.

There is no slam of lesser value, you might have bought a little too much into an anglo-centric viewpoint that Wimbledon is the be all and end all. They're all worth the same.

If no slam is of lesser value then when are you trying to devalue Feds to make your point? Nadal just won a Grand slam without playing Fed or Djokivic surely according to your criteria youd have this as an undervalued one?

He wins the Roland Garros and is so dominant there because it is his preferred surface and the other top players dont like it and dont have the same time on clay to adjust their game to make themselves competitive. There is no question that it is less competitive that the other surfaces

Fed backhand a weakness :D :D. Opponents dont go after it.... they just dont want his forehand. By the way I would say the strongest part of his game is his footwork/balance. His biggest weakness is probably his speed around the court.

If Nadal is further off his peak years because of the strain on his body it is demonstration that he is using more physical effort to win.

Context, Nadal, Federer and Djokovic are all courters. It's not as if Federer and Djokovic are like Pete Sampras, in that they are one dimensional players, unlike Sampras they have a lot more to their game than a big serve and only for the were around the same time as the greatest clay courter to ever play the game by a country mile they'd have 4 or 5 French Opens each. So every slam is worth the same US, Australian, French and Wimbledon.

The currency of the open in terms of competition is completely different. If you can't see that Federer's main rivals in that 03-07 era were powderpuff then you are an ostrich.

Roddick
Hewitt
Nalbandian
Safin
Davydenko

All washed up by their mid 20s.

Phillippoussis, Gonzalez, Bagdathis and an over the hill Agassi in slam finals at that time?

It's about context and there's no way you can say those slams are anywhere near as impressive as what Djokovic and Nadal accomplished in the subsequent years.

12 slams in 5 years (11 of those in a 4 year period) pre Nadal and Djokovic breakout against 8 in 12 years during the post breakout of Nadal and Djokovic. Unfortunately there are the kind of stats which the Fedheads try to run away from but they can't, all the smokescreens in the world won't diminish them which is why they usually have to lower the tone with completely unsubstantiated allegations against Nadal and Djokovic.

Speaking of Ostrichs Fed rose the bar to a new level in those years, the current crop had the opportunity to rise to meet it, his peers not so much. Nadal and Djokovic are exceptions obviously but your not gonna tell me that outside of the top 3 the top players were ALL just naturally better than the crop from 5 years previously. There was a reason they performed better and that reason was Fed had raised the bar and the next crop had more of an opportunity to hit that his peers did.

Grass and Hard court players have always struggled on clay sure Fed often flopped there in his early years. Clay courters have more of an opportunity and incentive to adapt their game. Whats more the nature of the methodical nature of the clay game means its very difficult for a lesser opponent to get one over a better player.  You only have to look at the results to say that Nadal has had nothing but an easy time there, and how many does he have then? 12 and counting is it?

Anyway are certain Slams worth more than others or not? Your saying they are and they arent, you cant have it both ways

Your own criteria for GOAT is letting your argument down Im afraid. Its Fairly irrelevant to my own opinion for GOAT but Ive a feeling that is the same for you to, you prob just like Nadal's big muscles and funky head bands ;) thats ok Im cool with that.